Entertainment Definition–noun | 1. | the act of entertaining; agreeable occupation for the mind; diversion; amusement: Solving the daily crossword puzzle is an entertainment for many. | | 2. | something affording pleasure, diversion, or amusement, esp. a performance of some kind: The highlight of the ball was an elaborate entertainment. | | 3. | hospitable provision for the needs and wants of guests. | | 4. | a divertingly adventurous, comic, or picaresque novel. | | 5. | Obsolete. maintenance in service. | |
From Dictionary Center Definition–noun | 1. | Geometry. the middle point, as the point within a circle or sphere equally distant from all points of the circumference or surface, or the point within a regular polygon equally distant from the vertices. | | 2. | a point, pivot, axis, etc., around which anything rotates or revolves: The sun is the center of the solar system. | | 3. | the source of an influence, action, force, etc.: the center of a problem. | | 4. | a point, place, person, etc., upon which interest, emotion, etc., focuses: His family is the center of his life. | | 5. | a principal point, place, or object: a shipping center.
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td> | | 6. | a building or part of a building used as a meeting place for a particular group or having facilities for certain activities: a youth center; The company has a complete recreation center in the basement. | | 7. | an office or other facility providing a specific service or dealing with a particular emergency: a flood-relief center; a crisis center. | | 8. | a person, thing, group, etc., occupying the middle position, esp. a body of troops. | | 9. | the core or middle of anything: chocolate candies with fruit centers. | | 10. | a store or establishment devoted to a particular subject or hobby, carrying supplies, materials, tools, and books as well as offering guidance and advice: a garden center; a nutrition center. | | 12. | (usually initial capital letter ) Government. | a. | the part of a legislative assembly, esp. in continental Europe, that sits in the center of the chamber, a position customarily assigned to members of the legislature who hold political views intermediate between those of the Right and Left. | | b. | the members of such an assembly who sit in the Center. | | c. | the political position of persons who hold moderate views. | | d. | politically moderate persons, taken collectively; Centrists; middle-of-the-roaders: Unfortunately, his homeland has always lacked a responsible Center. | | | 13. | Football. | a. | a lineman who occupies a position in the middle of the line and who puts the ball into play by tossing it between his legs to a back. | | b. | the position played by this lineman. | | | 14. | Basketball. | a. | a player who participates in a center jump. | | b. | the position of the player in the center of the court, where the center jump takes place at the beginning of play. | | | 15. | Ice Hockey. a player who participates in a face-off at the beginning of play. | | 17. | Physiology. a cluster of nerve cells governing a specific organic process: the vasomotor center. | | 18. | Mathematics. | a
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. | the mean position of a figure or system. | | b. | the set of elements of a group that commute with every element of the group. | | | 19. | Machinery. | a. | a tapered rod, mounted in the headstock spindle (live center) or the tailstock spindle (dead center) of a lathe, upon which the work to be turned is placed. | | b. | one of two similar points on some other machine, as a planing machine, enabling an object to be turned on its axis. | | c. | a tapered indentation, in a piece to be turned on a lathe, into which a center is fitted. | | –verb (used with object) | 20. | to place in or on a center: She centered the clock on the mantelpiece. | | 21. | to collect to or around a center; focus: He centered his novel on the Civil War. | | 22. | to determine or mark the center of: A small brass star centered the tabletop. | | 23. | to adjust, shape, or modify (an object, part, etc.) so that its axis or the like is in a central or normal position: to center the lens of a telescope; to center the work on a lathe. | | 24. | to place (an object, part, etc.) so as to be equidistant from all bordering or adjacent areas. | | 25. | Football. snap (def. 20). | | 26. | to pass (a basketball, hockey puck, etc.) from any place along the periphery toward the middle of the playing area. | –verb (used without object) | 27. | to be at or come to a center. | | 28. | to come to a focus; converge; concentrate (fol. by at, about, around, in, or on): The interest of the book centers specifically on the character of the eccentric hero. Political power in the town centers in the position of mayor. | | 29. | to gather or accumulate in a clus
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ter; collect (fol. by at, about, around, in, or on): Shops and municipal buildings center around the city square. | —Idiom | 30. | on center, from the centerline or midpoint of a structural member, an area of a plan, etc., to that of a similar member, area, etc.: The studs are set 30 inches on center. Abbreviation: o.c. | |
From Dictionary |