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discard

verb

  1. get rid of
L227665 on Wikidata ↗

noun

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L319514 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈdɪskɑːd/ / /ˈdɪskɑɹd/ / /dɪsˈkɑːd/ / /dɪˈskɑːd/ / /dɪsˈkɑɹd/

noun

Etymology: From dis- + card. Compare Spanish descartar.

  1. Anything discarded.
  2. One or more discarded playing cards in a card game.

    "Stroll across and see how the game is going," suggested Carrados. "Have a look at Crediton's discard and then come back."

  3. The act of discarding.

    Spinola was hovering about the external fittings of the figure with unusual fussiness. When at length he released the left hand it seemed for an almost perceptible moment that the action hung. Then the arm descended and carried out the discard.

  4. A temporary variable used to receive a value of no importance and unable to be read later.

    Discards can be used with out parameters, with tuples, with pattern matching (Chapters 6 and 8), or even as stand-alone variables.

verb

Etymology: From dis- + card. Compare Spanish descartar.

  1. To throw away, to reject.

    A man discards the follies of boyhood.

    My next stop is Oxford, which has also grown with the addition of new platforms to accommodate the Chiltern Railways service to London via Bicester - although, short sightedly, the planned electrification from Paddington was canned. Evidence of the volte-face can be seen along the line at places such as Radley, where mast piles are already sunk or lie discarded at the lineside.

  2. To make a discard; to throw out a card.
  3. To dismiss from employment, confidence, or favour; to discharge.

    […] They blame the Favourites in point of Policy, and think it nothing extraordinary, that the Queen ſhould be at an end of Her Patience, and reſolve to diſcard them.