version | |
1. n. A specific form or variation of something. | |
2. n. A translation from one language to another. | |
It's only in the King James Version of the Bible. | |
3. n. (education, archaic) A school exercise, generally of composition in a foreign language. | |
4. n. (obsolete) The act of translating, or rendering, from one language into another language. | |
5. n. An account or description from a particular point of view, especially as contrasted with another account. | |
He gave another version of the affair. | |
6. n. (computing) A particular revision (of software, firmware, CPU, etc.). | |
Upgrade to the latest version for new features and bug fixes. | |
7. n. (medicine) A condition of the uterus in which its axis is deflected from its normal position without being bent upon itself. See anteversion and retroversion. | |
8. n. (ophthalmology) An eye movement involving both eyes moving synchronously and symmetrically in the same direction. | |
9. n. (obsolete, or medicine) A change of form, direction, etc.; transformation; conversion. | |
External cephalic version is a process by which a breech baby can sometimes be turned from buttocks or foot first to head first. | |
10. v. (transitive, computing) To keep track of (a file, document, etc.) in a versioning system. | |