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semaphore/English/noun

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semaphore/English/noun: invalid uppercase tag General-American not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English countable nouns", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English nouns", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from Ancient Greek", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰer-", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰyeh₂-", "English terms prefixed with sema-", "English terms suffixed with -phore", "English uncountable nouns", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 1 entry", "Pages with entries", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hebrew translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Romanian translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Serbo-Croatian translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Turkish translations", "en:Rail transportation"], "derived": [{"word": "flag semaphore"}, {"word": "semaphore flag"}, {"word": "semaphore plant"}, {"word": "semaphore signal"}, {"tags": ["obsolete"], "word": "semaphoretic"}, {"word": "semaphoretical"}, {"word": "semaphoric"}, {"word": "semaphorin"}, {"word": "semaphorist"}], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "en", "2": "ine-pro", "3": "*dʰyeh₂-", "4": "*bʰer-"}, "expansion": "", "name": "root"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "sémaphore"}, "expansion": "French sémaphore", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "σῆμα", "t": "mark, sign, token"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "French -phore", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "-φόρος", "pos": "suffix indicating a bearer or carrier"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "sema-", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "By surface analysis, sema- + -phore", "name": "surf"}], "etymology_text": "The noun is borrowed from French sémaphore, from Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”) + French -phore (from Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)). By surface analysis, sema- + -phore.\nThe verb is derived from the noun.", "forms": [{"form": "semaphores", "tags": ["plural"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {"1": "~"}, "expansion": "semaphore (countable and uncountable, plural semaphores)", "name": "en-noun"}], "hyphenation": ["se‧ma‧phore"], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "[1820 January, “Art. II.—Thesaurus Græcæ Linguæ ab H. Stephano [Henry Stephens] constructus. Editio nova, auctior et emendatior. Vol. I. Partes I–IV. Londini, in ædibus Valpianis, 1815–1818. [book review]”, in William Gifford, editor, The Quarterly Review, volume XXII, number XLIV, London: John Murray, […], →OCLC, page 342:", "text": "We must here take the liberty of expostulating with Sir Home [Riggs] Popham and the first Lord of the Admiralty, for having given to the telegraphic machine, invented by that gallant officer, the barbarous name of Semaphore, instead of Sematophore or Semophore—either of them ugly enough.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1821, “[Papers in Mechanics.] No. V. Improved Semaphore.”, in Transactions of the Society, Instituted at London, for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce; […], volume XXXIX, London: Sold by the housekeeper, at the Society’s House, […]; printed by T[homas] C[urson] Hansard, […], →OCLC, page 104:", "text": "The large Silver Medal of the Society was this Session voted to Nic[h]olas Harris Nicolas, Esq. of the Inner Temple, for an Improvement on the Vertical Semaphore, and for his method of adapting a shifting Key to Telegraphic Communications, for the purpose of insuring their Secrecy. A Model of Mr. N's Semaphore has been placed in the Repository of the Society.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1831 October 8, W. Thomas, “[General Correspondence.] Night Signals.”, in The United Service Journal, and Naval and Military Magazine, part III, number 35, London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, […], →OCLC, page 392:", "text": "That the systems of telegraph and semaphore now in use are in a great measure use-less by night, and totally so in a fog, cannot be doubted; and that a mode, both rapid and secret, would could be put into practice at small expense, in fact little more than the first cost, would be of essential utility to the Government of the country adopting it, is equally true.", "type": "quote"}, {"english": "For the Term of His Natural Life", "ref": "1875, Marcus Clarke, “Running the Gauntlet”, in His Natural Life [For the Term of His Natural Life], volume III, London: Richard Bentley and Son, →OCLC, page 27:", "text": "The arms of the semaphore at the settlement were, in fact, gesticulating with comical vehemence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1879, Albert J[ames] Myer, “Semaphores”, in A Manual of Signals for the Use of Signal Officers in the Field, […], Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, →OCLC, pages 193–194:", "text": "When, on long lines of stations, towers or other structures are used, it may be necessary, for greater speed, to sometimes employ semaphores for aerial telegraphy. [...] Semaphores consist of a post with arms. The arms starting with about three feet in length, to be increased one foot for every mile. These arms are made movable by ropes passing over wheels or pulleys, and moved by a crank below.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1895 January–June, Rudyard Kipling, “An Unqualified Pilot”, in Land & Sea Tales for Scouts and Guides, Bombay: The Gresham Publishing Company; London: Macmillan and Co., published August 1919, →OCLC, page 68:", "text": "And so they went down, Jim steering by his father, turn for turn, over the Mayapur Bar, with the semaphores on each bank duly signalling the depth of water, [...]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1906 July 19, “The Wright Telegraph Railroad Signal”, in The Iron Age, volume LXXVIII, New York, N.Y.: David Williams Company […], →OCLC, page 139, column 2:", "text": "It is essentially an emergency device, primarily for use on single track railroads, and is intended to place the control of semaphores at the several stations under the control of the dispatcher. By means of this signal the dispatcher may throw a semaphore to \"stop position\" at any desired point, regardless of the condition of the operator's instrument at that station, that is whether or not the key of his instrument on the dispatcher's wire is open.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1941 April, “Centenary of the Semaphore Signal”, in Railway Magazine, page 171:", "text": "Now, a century later, semaphores and discs are giving place to colour and position lights. What will be the fashion in 2041? Universal continuous cab signalling?", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1968, F[rits] van der Gragt, Europe's Greatest Tramway Network: Tramways in the Rhein–Ruhr Area of Germany (Uitgaven van de Nederlandsche Vereeniging van Belangstellenden in het Spoor- en Tramwegwezen [Publications by the Dutch Association of People Interested in the Rail- and Tramway System]; 4), Leiden: E[vert] J[an] Brill, →OCLC, page 128:", "text": "Travelling by the rural tramway was quite an experience; the small car would bounce about on the bad track like a ship in a rough sea; at some places, there would even be genuine railway semaphore signals controlling the trams.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1995, Sten Thore, “Messages, Images, and Robots”, in The Diversity, Complexity, and Evolution of High Tech Capitalism, Boston, Mass., Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, →ISBN, page 27:", "text": "Innovations in the communications industry often means that existing media become obsolete. There are no semaphores any longer. (Semaphores were used by the French revolutionary armies in the late 1790's to relay information to Paris about their victories in the Savoy.)", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2004 September 25, Terry Pratchett, Going Postal (A Discworld Novel; 33), London: Doubleday, →ISBN; republished London: Corgi Books, Transworld Publishers, 2005 (2014 printing), →ISBN, pages 149–150:", "text": "He had got used to the clacks towers now. Sometimes it seemed as though every roof sprouted one. Most were the new shutter boxes installed by the Grand Trunk Company, but old-fashioned arm semaphores and even signal flags were still well in evidence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2020 December 2, Paul Bigland, “My weirdest and wackiest Rover yet”, in Rail, page 67:", "text": "Even so, there are only four others in my car after leaving the pretty station at Abergavenny, a haven of old GWR semaphores.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words."], "links": [["equipment", "equipment"], ["used", "used"], ["visual", "visual"], ["signalling", "signalling"], ["flags", "flags"], ["lights", "lights"], ["mechanically", "mechanically"], ["moving", "moving"], ["arms", "arms"], ["represent", "represent"], ["letters", "letters"], ["alphabet", "alphabet"], ["words", "words"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "1834 October, Charles Blackburn, “XXXV. A Method of Determining the Number of Signals which Can be Made by the Modern Telegraphs.”, in David Brewster, Richard Taylor, Richard Phillips, editors, The London and Edinburgh Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, volume V (Third Series), number 28, London: Printed by Richard Taylor, […], printer to the University of London; sold by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman; [et al.], →OCLC, page 241:", "text": "Its [the article's] object is to furnish a rule for determining the number of distinct signals which can be made by any semaphore, whatever be the number of arms or indicators, of whatever be the number of positions of each arm. In the Cyclopædia of Rees, the number of signals which the semaphores of the line of communication between Paris and Landau were capable of making, is stated to be 823,543, which is no less than 1,274,608 fewer than the real number, an error not arising from the press, but from the principle of computation.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1924 September, Arthur Conan Doyle, “Sidelights on Sherlock Holmes”, in Memories and Adventures, Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown, and Company, →OCLC, page 110:", "text": "Buried treasures are naturally among the problems which have come to Mr. [Sherlock] Holmes. One genuine case was accompanied by a diagram here reproduced. [...] Each Indiaman in those days had its own semaphore code, and it is conjectured that the three marks upon the left are signals from a three-armed semaphore.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2006, Erinn Banting, Inventing the Telephone (Breakthrough Inventions), New York, N.Y., Toronto, Ont.: Crabtree Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 5, column 2:", "text": "A system of communication called semaphore uses flags or flashing lights to send messages over distances. [...] Code flags are less common today but are sometimes used by ships that have lost radio contact.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Katherine Vaz, “Lisbon Story”, in Our Lady of the Artichokes: And Other Portuguese-American Stories, Lincoln, Neb., London: University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN, page 115:", "text": "As always in Lisbon, my heart throbbed semaphores to call Tónio.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Gene Weingarten, “Remembering Harry”, in Old Dogs are the Best Dogs, New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, page 4:", "text": "Consider the wagging tail, the most basic semaphore in dog/human communication.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2010, Jonathan Balcombe, “Communicating”, in Second Nature: The Inner Lives of Animals, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, part II (Coexistence), page 84:", "text": "Semaphore—a system of communicating over long distances by holding the arms or two flags in certain positions—is not a very efficient mode of communication for us. But for the Panamanian golden frog, semaphore is just the ticket. These frogs live near waterfalls, where the constant din renders vocal communication useless. [...] When they want to get someone else's attention, they flash pale patches of skin on their limbs or the webs between their toes.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2014, Bernard F. Dick, “Worlds Elsewhere”, in The President’s Ladies: Jane Wyman and Nancy Davis, Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi, →ISBN, page 215:", "text": "For a half-hour episode, \"The Long Shadow\" was unusually complex, a web spun out of deception and equivocation that untangles when [Ronald] Reagan, transmitting his customized semaphores of concern (ridged brow, pursed lips, pained eyes), divulges the truth: [...]", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore."], "links": [["system", "system"], ["transmit", "transmit"], ["information", "information"], ["two", "two"], ["one", "one"], ["hand", "hand"], ["alphabetic", "alphabetic"], ["numeric", "numeric"], ["code", "code"], ["based", "based"], ["position", "position"], ["signaller", "signaller"], ["flag semaphore", "flag semaphore"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations", "English terms with usage examples", "en:Programming"], "examples": [{"text": "The thread increments the semaphore to prevent other threads from entering the critical section at the same time.", "type": "example"}, {"ref": "1996, P. Theodoropoulos, G. Manis, P. Tsanakas, G. Papakonstantinou, “Extending Synchronization PVM Mechanisms”, in Arndt Bode, Jack Dongarra, Thomas Ludwig, Vaidy Sunderam, editors, Parallel Virtual Machine – EuroPVM ’96: Third European PVM Conference, Munich, Germany, October 7–9, 1996: Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science; 1156), Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 315:", "text": "Several synchronization techniques have been proposed and many of them have been adopted by parallel and distributed operating systems or parallel programming platforms. [...] Semaphores represent another synchronization technique that is mainly used by traditional stand-alone operating systems.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, David Sklar, Adam Trachtenberg, “Variables”, in Paula Ferguson, editor, PHP Cookbook, Sebastopol, Calif.: O’Reilly & Associates, →ISBN, section 5.6 (Sharing Variables across Processes), page 124:", "text": "A semaphore makes sure that the different processes don't step on each other's toes when they access the shared memory segment. Before a process can use the segment, it needs to get control of the semaphore. When it's done with the segment, it releases the semaphore for another process to grab.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2012, Timothy Mangan, “L1/L2/L3 Memory Cache”, in Windows System Performance through Caching: 15 Ways Caching Improves System Performance (Inside the OS Series), Canton, Mass.: TMurgent Technologies, →ISBN, page 22:", "text": "It is up to the programmer to ensure that if one thread updates multiple dependent memory locations (for example, writing a string, or updating a table) that another thread might read, some protection is put in place to ensure that the two threads don't update and read at the same time. [...] Several techniques are used by programmers to prevent this, including locks, semaphores, and mutexes.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "links": [["programming", "programming#Noun"], ["bit", "bit"], ["token", "token"], ["fragment", "fragment"], ["mechanism", "mechanism"], ["restrict", "restrict"], ["access", "access"], ["shared", "shared"], ["function", "function"], ["device", "device"], ["single", "single"], ["process", "process"], ["time", "time"], ["synchronize", "synchronize"], ["coordinate", "coordinate"], ["event", "event"], ["different", "different"]], "raw_glosses": ["(programming) A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"], "topics": ["computing", "engineering", "mathematics", "natural-sciences", "physical-sciences", "programming", "sciences"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfɔː/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"audio": "En-uk-semaphore.oga", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga/En-uk-semaphore.oga.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga"}, {"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfoɹ/", "tags": ["General-American"]}], "translations": [{"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "ro", "lang": "Romanian", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["neuter"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "hy", "lang": "Armenian", "roman": "lusazdanšan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "լուսազդանշան"}, {"code": "ca", "lang": "Catalan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semàfor"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastinjärjestelmä"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "hu", "lang": "Hungarian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "szemafor"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semaforo"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "се̏мафо̄р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sȅmafōr"}, {"code": "es", "lang": "Spanish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semáforo"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "lippuviittoilu"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semaforo marittimo"}, {"alt": "てばたしんがう", "code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "tebata shingō", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "手旗信号"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "flažkóvaja signalizácija", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "флажко́вая сигнализа́ция"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafori"}, {"code": "fr", "lang": "French", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sémaphore"}, {"code": "de", "lang": "German", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "Semaphor"}, {"code": "el", "lang": "Greek", "roman": "simatofóros", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "σηματοφόρος"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "is", "lang": "Icelandic", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["feminine"], "word": "veif"}, {"code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "semafo", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "セマフォ"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sv", "lang": "Swedish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["common-gender"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "tr", "lang": "Turkish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafor"}], "wikipedia": ["semaphore"], "word": "semaphore"}

semaphore (English noun) semaphore/English/noun: invalid uppercase tag General-American not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English countable nouns", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English nouns", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from Ancient Greek", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰer-", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰyeh₂-", "English terms prefixed with sema-", "English terms suffixed with -phore", "English uncountable nouns", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 1 entry", "Pages with entries", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hebrew translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Romanian translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Serbo-Croatian translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Turkish translations", "en:Rail transportation"], "derived": [{"word": "flag semaphore"}, {"word": "semaphore flag"}, {"word": "semaphore plant"}, {"word": "semaphore signal"}, {"tags": ["obsolete"], "word": "semaphoretic"}, {"word": "semaphoretical"}, {"word": "semaphoric"}, {"word": "semaphorin"}, {"word": "semaphorist"}], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "en", "2": "ine-pro", "3": "*dʰyeh₂-", "4": "*bʰer-"}, "expansion": "", "name": "root"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "sémaphore"}, "expansion": "French sémaphore", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "σῆμα", "t": "mark, sign, token"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "French -phore", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "-φόρος", "pos": "suffix indicating a bearer or carrier"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "sema-", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "By surface analysis, sema- + -phore", "name": "surf"}], "etymology_text": "The noun is borrowed from French sémaphore, from Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”) + French -phore (from Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)). By surface analysis, sema- + -phore.\nThe verb is derived from the noun.", "forms": [{"form": "semaphores", "tags": ["plural"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {"1": "~"}, "expansion": "semaphore (countable and uncountable, plural semaphores)", "name": "en-noun"}], "hyphenation": ["se‧ma‧phore"], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "[1820 January, “Art. II.—Thesaurus Græcæ Linguæ ab H. Stephano [Henry Stephens] constructus. Editio nova, auctior et emendatior. Vol. I. Partes I–IV. Londini, in ædibus Valpianis, 1815–1818. [book review]”, in William Gifford, editor, The Quarterly Review, volume XXII, number XLIV, London: John Murray, […], →OCLC, page 342:", "text": "We must here take the liberty of expostulating with Sir Home [Riggs] Popham and the first Lord of the Admiralty, for having given to the telegraphic machine, invented by that gallant officer, the barbarous name of Semaphore, instead of Sematophore or Semophore—either of them ugly enough.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1821, “[Papers in Mechanics.] No. V. Improved Semaphore.”, in Transactions of the Society, Instituted at London, for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce; […], volume XXXIX, London: Sold by the housekeeper, at the Society’s House, […]; printed by T[homas] C[urson] Hansard, […], →OCLC, page 104:", "text": "The large Silver Medal of the Society was this Session voted to Nic[h]olas Harris Nicolas, Esq. of the Inner Temple, for an Improvement on the Vertical Semaphore, and for his method of adapting a shifting Key to Telegraphic Communications, for the purpose of insuring their Secrecy. A Model of Mr. N's Semaphore has been placed in the Repository of the Society.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1831 October 8, W. Thomas, “[General Correspondence.] Night Signals.”, in The United Service Journal, and Naval and Military Magazine, part III, number 35, London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, […], →OCLC, page 392:", "text": "That the systems of telegraph and semaphore now in use are in a great measure use-less by night, and totally so in a fog, cannot be doubted; and that a mode, both rapid and secret, would could be put into practice at small expense, in fact little more than the first cost, would be of essential utility to the Government of the country adopting it, is equally true.", "type": "quote"}, {"english": "For the Term of His Natural Life", "ref": "1875, Marcus Clarke, “Running the Gauntlet”, in His Natural Life [For the Term of His Natural Life], volume III, London: Richard Bentley and Son, →OCLC, page 27:", "text": "The arms of the semaphore at the settlement were, in fact, gesticulating with comical vehemence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1879, Albert J[ames] Myer, “Semaphores”, in A Manual of Signals for the Use of Signal Officers in the Field, […], Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, →OCLC, pages 193–194:", "text": "When, on long lines of stations, towers or other structures are used, it may be necessary, for greater speed, to sometimes employ semaphores for aerial telegraphy. [...] Semaphores consist of a post with arms. The arms starting with about three feet in length, to be increased one foot for every mile. These arms are made movable by ropes passing over wheels or pulleys, and moved by a crank below.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1895 January–June, Rudyard Kipling, “An Unqualified Pilot”, in Land & Sea Tales for Scouts and Guides, Bombay: The Gresham Publishing Company; London: Macmillan and Co., published August 1919, →OCLC, page 68:", "text": "And so they went down, Jim steering by his father, turn for turn, over the Mayapur Bar, with the semaphores on each bank duly signalling the depth of water, [...]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1906 July 19, “The Wright Telegraph Railroad Signal”, in The Iron Age, volume LXXVIII, New York, N.Y.: David Williams Company […], →OCLC, page 139, column 2:", "text": "It is essentially an emergency device, primarily for use on single track railroads, and is intended to place the control of semaphores at the several stations under the control of the dispatcher. By means of this signal the dispatcher may throw a semaphore to \"stop position\" at any desired point, regardless of the condition of the operator's instrument at that station, that is whether or not the key of his instrument on the dispatcher's wire is open.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1941 April, “Centenary of the Semaphore Signal”, in Railway Magazine, page 171:", "text": "Now, a century later, semaphores and discs are giving place to colour and position lights. What will be the fashion in 2041? Universal continuous cab signalling?", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1968, F[rits] van der Gragt, Europe's Greatest Tramway Network: Tramways in the Rhein–Ruhr Area of Germany (Uitgaven van de Nederlandsche Vereeniging van Belangstellenden in het Spoor- en Tramwegwezen [Publications by the Dutch Association of People Interested in the Rail- and Tramway System]; 4), Leiden: E[vert] J[an] Brill, →OCLC, page 128:", "text": "Travelling by the rural tramway was quite an experience; the small car would bounce about on the bad track like a ship in a rough sea; at some places, there would even be genuine railway semaphore signals controlling the trams.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1995, Sten Thore, “Messages, Images, and Robots”, in The Diversity, Complexity, and Evolution of High Tech Capitalism, Boston, Mass., Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, →ISBN, page 27:", "text": "Innovations in the communications industry often means that existing media become obsolete. There are no semaphores any longer. (Semaphores were used by the French revolutionary armies in the late 1790's to relay information to Paris about their victories in the Savoy.)", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2004 September 25, Terry Pratchett, Going Postal (A Discworld Novel; 33), London: Doubleday, →ISBN; republished London: Corgi Books, Transworld Publishers, 2005 (2014 printing), →ISBN, pages 149–150:", "text": "He had got used to the clacks towers now. Sometimes it seemed as though every roof sprouted one. Most were the new shutter boxes installed by the Grand Trunk Company, but old-fashioned arm semaphores and even signal flags were still well in evidence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2020 December 2, Paul Bigland, “My weirdest and wackiest Rover yet”, in Rail, page 67:", "text": "Even so, there are only four others in my car after leaving the pretty station at Abergavenny, a haven of old GWR semaphores.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words."], "links": [["equipment", "equipment"], ["used", "used"], ["visual", "visual"], ["signalling", "signalling"], ["flags", "flags"], ["lights", "lights"], ["mechanically", "mechanically"], ["moving", "moving"], ["arms", "arms"], ["represent", "represent"], ["letters", "letters"], ["alphabet", "alphabet"], ["words", "words"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "1834 October, Charles Blackburn, “XXXV. A Method of Determining the Number of Signals which Can be Made by the Modern Telegraphs.”, in David Brewster, Richard Taylor, Richard Phillips, editors, The London and Edinburgh Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, volume V (Third Series), number 28, London: Printed by Richard Taylor, […], printer to the University of London; sold by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman; [et al.], →OCLC, page 241:", "text": "Its [the article's] object is to furnish a rule for determining the number of distinct signals which can be made by any semaphore, whatever be the number of arms or indicators, of whatever be the number of positions of each arm. In the Cyclopædia of Rees, the number of signals which the semaphores of the line of communication between Paris and Landau were capable of making, is stated to be 823,543, which is no less than 1,274,608 fewer than the real number, an error not arising from the press, but from the principle of computation.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1924 September, Arthur Conan Doyle, “Sidelights on Sherlock Holmes”, in Memories and Adventures, Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown, and Company, →OCLC, page 110:", "text": "Buried treasures are naturally among the problems which have come to Mr. [Sherlock] Holmes. One genuine case was accompanied by a diagram here reproduced. [...] Each Indiaman in those days had its own semaphore code, and it is conjectured that the three marks upon the left are signals from a three-armed semaphore.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2006, Erinn Banting, Inventing the Telephone (Breakthrough Inventions), New York, N.Y., Toronto, Ont.: Crabtree Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 5, column 2:", "text": "A system of communication called semaphore uses flags or flashing lights to send messages over distances. [...] Code flags are less common today but are sometimes used by ships that have lost radio contact.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Katherine Vaz, “Lisbon Story”, in Our Lady of the Artichokes: And Other Portuguese-American Stories, Lincoln, Neb., London: University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN, page 115:", "text": "As always in Lisbon, my heart throbbed semaphores to call Tónio.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Gene Weingarten, “Remembering Harry”, in Old Dogs are the Best Dogs, New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, page 4:", "text": "Consider the wagging tail, the most basic semaphore in dog/human communication.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2010, Jonathan Balcombe, “Communicating”, in Second Nature: The Inner Lives of Animals, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, part II (Coexistence), page 84:", "text": "Semaphore—a system of communicating over long distances by holding the arms or two flags in certain positions—is not a very efficient mode of communication for us. But for the Panamanian golden frog, semaphore is just the ticket. These frogs live near waterfalls, where the constant din renders vocal communication useless. [...] When they want to get someone else's attention, they flash pale patches of skin on their limbs or the webs between their toes.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2014, Bernard F. Dick, “Worlds Elsewhere”, in The President’s Ladies: Jane Wyman and Nancy Davis, Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi, →ISBN, page 215:", "text": "For a half-hour episode, \"The Long Shadow\" was unusually complex, a web spun out of deception and equivocation that untangles when [Ronald] Reagan, transmitting his customized semaphores of concern (ridged brow, pursed lips, pained eyes), divulges the truth: [...]", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore."], "links": [["system", "system"], ["transmit", "transmit"], ["information", "information"], ["two", "two"], ["one", "one"], ["hand", "hand"], ["alphabetic", "alphabetic"], ["numeric", "numeric"], ["code", "code"], ["based", "based"], ["position", "position"], ["signaller", "signaller"], ["flag semaphore", "flag semaphore"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations", "English terms with usage examples", "en:Programming"], "examples": [{"text": "The thread increments the semaphore to prevent other threads from entering the critical section at the same time.", "type": "example"}, {"ref": "1996, P. Theodoropoulos, G. Manis, P. Tsanakas, G. Papakonstantinou, “Extending Synchronization PVM Mechanisms”, in Arndt Bode, Jack Dongarra, Thomas Ludwig, Vaidy Sunderam, editors, Parallel Virtual Machine – EuroPVM ’96: Third European PVM Conference, Munich, Germany, October 7–9, 1996: Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science; 1156), Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 315:", "text": "Several synchronization techniques have been proposed and many of them have been adopted by parallel and distributed operating systems or parallel programming platforms. [...] Semaphores represent another synchronization technique that is mainly used by traditional stand-alone operating systems.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, David Sklar, Adam Trachtenberg, “Variables”, in Paula Ferguson, editor, PHP Cookbook, Sebastopol, Calif.: O’Reilly & Associates, →ISBN, section 5.6 (Sharing Variables across Processes), page 124:", "text": "A semaphore makes sure that the different processes don't step on each other's toes when they access the shared memory segment. Before a process can use the segment, it needs to get control of the semaphore. When it's done with the segment, it releases the semaphore for another process to grab.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2012, Timothy Mangan, “L1/L2/L3 Memory Cache”, in Windows System Performance through Caching: 15 Ways Caching Improves System Performance (Inside the OS Series), Canton, Mass.: TMurgent Technologies, →ISBN, page 22:", "text": "It is up to the programmer to ensure that if one thread updates multiple dependent memory locations (for example, writing a string, or updating a table) that another thread might read, some protection is put in place to ensure that the two threads don't update and read at the same time. [...] Several techniques are used by programmers to prevent this, including locks, semaphores, and mutexes.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "links": [["programming", "programming#Noun"], ["bit", "bit"], ["token", "token"], ["fragment", "fragment"], ["mechanism", "mechanism"], ["restrict", "restrict"], ["access", "access"], ["shared", "shared"], ["function", "function"], ["device", "device"], ["single", "single"], ["process", "process"], ["time", "time"], ["synchronize", "synchronize"], ["coordinate", "coordinate"], ["event", "event"], ["different", "different"]], "raw_glosses": ["(programming) A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"], "topics": ["computing", "engineering", "mathematics", "natural-sciences", "physical-sciences", "programming", "sciences"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfɔː/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"audio": "En-uk-semaphore.oga", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga/En-uk-semaphore.oga.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga"}, {"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfoɹ/", "tags": ["General-American"]}], "translations": [{"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "ro", "lang": "Romanian", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["neuter"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "hy", "lang": "Armenian", "roman": "lusazdanšan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "լուսազդանշան"}, {"code": "ca", "lang": "Catalan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semàfor"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastinjärjestelmä"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "hu", "lang": "Hungarian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "szemafor"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semaforo"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "се̏мафо̄р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sȅmafōr"}, {"code": "es", "lang": "Spanish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semáforo"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "lippuviittoilu"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semaforo marittimo"}, {"alt": "てばたしんがう", "code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "tebata shingō", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "手旗信号"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "flažkóvaja signalizácija", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "флажко́вая сигнализа́ция"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafori"}, {"code": "fr", "lang": "French", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sémaphore"}, {"code": "de", "lang": "German", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "Semaphor"}, {"code": "el", "lang": "Greek", "roman": "simatofóros", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "σηματοφόρος"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "is", "lang": "Icelandic", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["feminine"], "word": "veif"}, {"code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "semafo", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "セマフォ"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sv", "lang": "Swedish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["common-gender"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "tr", "lang": "Turkish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafor"}], "wikipedia": ["semaphore"], "word": "semaphore"}

semaphore/English/noun: invalid uppercase tag Received-Pronunciation not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English countable nouns", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English nouns", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from Ancient Greek", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰer-", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰyeh₂-", "English terms prefixed with sema-", "English terms suffixed with -phore", "English uncountable nouns", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 1 entry", "Pages with entries", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hebrew translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Romanian translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Serbo-Croatian translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Turkish translations", "en:Rail transportation"], "derived": [{"word": "flag semaphore"}, {"word": "semaphore flag"}, {"word": "semaphore plant"}, {"word": "semaphore signal"}, {"tags": ["obsolete"], "word": "semaphoretic"}, {"word": "semaphoretical"}, {"word": "semaphoric"}, {"word": "semaphorin"}, {"word": "semaphorist"}], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "en", "2": "ine-pro", "3": "*dʰyeh₂-", "4": "*bʰer-"}, "expansion": "", "name": "root"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "sémaphore"}, "expansion": "French sémaphore", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "σῆμα", "t": "mark, sign, token"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "French -phore", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "-φόρος", "pos": "suffix indicating a bearer or carrier"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "sema-", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "By surface analysis, sema- + -phore", "name": "surf"}], "etymology_text": "The noun is borrowed from French sémaphore, from Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”) + French -phore (from Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)). By surface analysis, sema- + -phore.\nThe verb is derived from the noun.", "forms": [{"form": "semaphores", "tags": ["plural"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {"1": "~"}, "expansion": "semaphore (countable and uncountable, plural semaphores)", "name": "en-noun"}], "hyphenation": ["se‧ma‧phore"], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "[1820 January, “Art. II.—Thesaurus Græcæ Linguæ ab H. Stephano [Henry Stephens] constructus. Editio nova, auctior et emendatior. Vol. I. Partes I–IV. Londini, in ædibus Valpianis, 1815–1818. [book review]”, in William Gifford, editor, The Quarterly Review, volume XXII, number XLIV, London: John Murray, […], →OCLC, page 342:", "text": "We must here take the liberty of expostulating with Sir Home [Riggs] Popham and the first Lord of the Admiralty, for having given to the telegraphic machine, invented by that gallant officer, the barbarous name of Semaphore, instead of Sematophore or Semophore—either of them ugly enough.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1821, “[Papers in Mechanics.] No. V. Improved Semaphore.”, in Transactions of the Society, Instituted at London, for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce; […], volume XXXIX, London: Sold by the housekeeper, at the Society’s House, […]; printed by T[homas] C[urson] Hansard, […], →OCLC, page 104:", "text": "The large Silver Medal of the Society was this Session voted to Nic[h]olas Harris Nicolas, Esq. of the Inner Temple, for an Improvement on the Vertical Semaphore, and for his method of adapting a shifting Key to Telegraphic Communications, for the purpose of insuring their Secrecy. A Model of Mr. N's Semaphore has been placed in the Repository of the Society.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1831 October 8, W. Thomas, “[General Correspondence.] Night Signals.”, in The United Service Journal, and Naval and Military Magazine, part III, number 35, London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, […], →OCLC, page 392:", "text": "That the systems of telegraph and semaphore now in use are in a great measure use-less by night, and totally so in a fog, cannot be doubted; and that a mode, both rapid and secret, would could be put into practice at small expense, in fact little more than the first cost, would be of essential utility to the Government of the country adopting it, is equally true.", "type": "quote"}, {"english": "For the Term of His Natural Life", "ref": "1875, Marcus Clarke, “Running the Gauntlet”, in His Natural Life [For the Term of His Natural Life], volume III, London: Richard Bentley and Son, →OCLC, page 27:", "text": "The arms of the semaphore at the settlement were, in fact, gesticulating with comical vehemence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1879, Albert J[ames] Myer, “Semaphores”, in A Manual of Signals for the Use of Signal Officers in the Field, […], Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, →OCLC, pages 193–194:", "text": "When, on long lines of stations, towers or other structures are used, it may be necessary, for greater speed, to sometimes employ semaphores for aerial telegraphy. [...] Semaphores consist of a post with arms. The arms starting with about three feet in length, to be increased one foot for every mile. These arms are made movable by ropes passing over wheels or pulleys, and moved by a crank below.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1895 January–June, Rudyard Kipling, “An Unqualified Pilot”, in Land & Sea Tales for Scouts and Guides, Bombay: The Gresham Publishing Company; London: Macmillan and Co., published August 1919, →OCLC, page 68:", "text": "And so they went down, Jim steering by his father, turn for turn, over the Mayapur Bar, with the semaphores on each bank duly signalling the depth of water, [...]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1906 July 19, “The Wright Telegraph Railroad Signal”, in The Iron Age, volume LXXVIII, New York, N.Y.: David Williams Company […], →OCLC, page 139, column 2:", "text": "It is essentially an emergency device, primarily for use on single track railroads, and is intended to place the control of semaphores at the several stations under the control of the dispatcher. By means of this signal the dispatcher may throw a semaphore to \"stop position\" at any desired point, regardless of the condition of the operator's instrument at that station, that is whether or not the key of his instrument on the dispatcher's wire is open.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1941 April, “Centenary of the Semaphore Signal”, in Railway Magazine, page 171:", "text": "Now, a century later, semaphores and discs are giving place to colour and position lights. What will be the fashion in 2041? Universal continuous cab signalling?", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1968, F[rits] van der Gragt, Europe's Greatest Tramway Network: Tramways in the Rhein–Ruhr Area of Germany (Uitgaven van de Nederlandsche Vereeniging van Belangstellenden in het Spoor- en Tramwegwezen [Publications by the Dutch Association of People Interested in the Rail- and Tramway System]; 4), Leiden: E[vert] J[an] Brill, →OCLC, page 128:", "text": "Travelling by the rural tramway was quite an experience; the small car would bounce about on the bad track like a ship in a rough sea; at some places, there would even be genuine railway semaphore signals controlling the trams.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1995, Sten Thore, “Messages, Images, and Robots”, in The Diversity, Complexity, and Evolution of High Tech Capitalism, Boston, Mass., Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, →ISBN, page 27:", "text": "Innovations in the communications industry often means that existing media become obsolete. There are no semaphores any longer. (Semaphores were used by the French revolutionary armies in the late 1790's to relay information to Paris about their victories in the Savoy.)", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2004 September 25, Terry Pratchett, Going Postal (A Discworld Novel; 33), London: Doubleday, →ISBN; republished London: Corgi Books, Transworld Publishers, 2005 (2014 printing), →ISBN, pages 149–150:", "text": "He had got used to the clacks towers now. Sometimes it seemed as though every roof sprouted one. Most were the new shutter boxes installed by the Grand Trunk Company, but old-fashioned arm semaphores and even signal flags were still well in evidence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2020 December 2, Paul Bigland, “My weirdest and wackiest Rover yet”, in Rail, page 67:", "text": "Even so, there are only four others in my car after leaving the pretty station at Abergavenny, a haven of old GWR semaphores.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words."], "links": [["equipment", "equipment"], ["used", "used"], ["visual", "visual"], ["signalling", "signalling"], ["flags", "flags"], ["lights", "lights"], ["mechanically", "mechanically"], ["moving", "moving"], ["arms", "arms"], ["represent", "represent"], ["letters", "letters"], ["alphabet", "alphabet"], ["words", "words"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "1834 October, Charles Blackburn, “XXXV. A Method of Determining the Number of Signals which Can be Made by the Modern Telegraphs.”, in David Brewster, Richard Taylor, Richard Phillips, editors, The London and Edinburgh Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, volume V (Third Series), number 28, London: Printed by Richard Taylor, […], printer to the University of London; sold by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman; [et al.], →OCLC, page 241:", "text": "Its [the article's] object is to furnish a rule for determining the number of distinct signals which can be made by any semaphore, whatever be the number of arms or indicators, of whatever be the number of positions of each arm. In the Cyclopædia of Rees, the number of signals which the semaphores of the line of communication between Paris and Landau were capable of making, is stated to be 823,543, which is no less than 1,274,608 fewer than the real number, an error not arising from the press, but from the principle of computation.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1924 September, Arthur Conan Doyle, “Sidelights on Sherlock Holmes”, in Memories and Adventures, Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown, and Company, →OCLC, page 110:", "text": "Buried treasures are naturally among the problems which have come to Mr. [Sherlock] Holmes. One genuine case was accompanied by a diagram here reproduced. [...] Each Indiaman in those days had its own semaphore code, and it is conjectured that the three marks upon the left are signals from a three-armed semaphore.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2006, Erinn Banting, Inventing the Telephone (Breakthrough Inventions), New York, N.Y., Toronto, Ont.: Crabtree Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 5, column 2:", "text": "A system of communication called semaphore uses flags or flashing lights to send messages over distances. [...] Code flags are less common today but are sometimes used by ships that have lost radio contact.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Katherine Vaz, “Lisbon Story”, in Our Lady of the Artichokes: And Other Portuguese-American Stories, Lincoln, Neb., London: University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN, page 115:", "text": "As always in Lisbon, my heart throbbed semaphores to call Tónio.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Gene Weingarten, “Remembering Harry”, in Old Dogs are the Best Dogs, New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, page 4:", "text": "Consider the wagging tail, the most basic semaphore in dog/human communication.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2010, Jonathan Balcombe, “Communicating”, in Second Nature: The Inner Lives of Animals, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, part II (Coexistence), page 84:", "text": "Semaphore—a system of communicating over long distances by holding the arms or two flags in certain positions—is not a very efficient mode of communication for us. But for the Panamanian golden frog, semaphore is just the ticket. These frogs live near waterfalls, where the constant din renders vocal communication useless. [...] When they want to get someone else's attention, they flash pale patches of skin on their limbs or the webs between their toes.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2014, Bernard F. Dick, “Worlds Elsewhere”, in The President’s Ladies: Jane Wyman and Nancy Davis, Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi, →ISBN, page 215:", "text": "For a half-hour episode, \"The Long Shadow\" was unusually complex, a web spun out of deception and equivocation that untangles when [Ronald] Reagan, transmitting his customized semaphores of concern (ridged brow, pursed lips, pained eyes), divulges the truth: [...]", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore."], "links": [["system", "system"], ["transmit", "transmit"], ["information", "information"], ["two", "two"], ["one", "one"], ["hand", "hand"], ["alphabetic", "alphabetic"], ["numeric", "numeric"], ["code", "code"], ["based", "based"], ["position", "position"], ["signaller", "signaller"], ["flag semaphore", "flag semaphore"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations", "English terms with usage examples", "en:Programming"], "examples": [{"text": "The thread increments the semaphore to prevent other threads from entering the critical section at the same time.", "type": "example"}, {"ref": "1996, P. Theodoropoulos, G. Manis, P. Tsanakas, G. Papakonstantinou, “Extending Synchronization PVM Mechanisms”, in Arndt Bode, Jack Dongarra, Thomas Ludwig, Vaidy Sunderam, editors, Parallel Virtual Machine – EuroPVM ’96: Third European PVM Conference, Munich, Germany, October 7–9, 1996: Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science; 1156), Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 315:", "text": "Several synchronization techniques have been proposed and many of them have been adopted by parallel and distributed operating systems or parallel programming platforms. [...] Semaphores represent another synchronization technique that is mainly used by traditional stand-alone operating systems.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, David Sklar, Adam Trachtenberg, “Variables”, in Paula Ferguson, editor, PHP Cookbook, Sebastopol, Calif.: O’Reilly & Associates, →ISBN, section 5.6 (Sharing Variables across Processes), page 124:", "text": "A semaphore makes sure that the different processes don't step on each other's toes when they access the shared memory segment. Before a process can use the segment, it needs to get control of the semaphore. When it's done with the segment, it releases the semaphore for another process to grab.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2012, Timothy Mangan, “L1/L2/L3 Memory Cache”, in Windows System Performance through Caching: 15 Ways Caching Improves System Performance (Inside the OS Series), Canton, Mass.: TMurgent Technologies, →ISBN, page 22:", "text": "It is up to the programmer to ensure that if one thread updates multiple dependent memory locations (for example, writing a string, or updating a table) that another thread might read, some protection is put in place to ensure that the two threads don't update and read at the same time. [...] Several techniques are used by programmers to prevent this, including locks, semaphores, and mutexes.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "links": [["programming", "programming#Noun"], ["bit", "bit"], ["token", "token"], ["fragment", "fragment"], ["mechanism", "mechanism"], ["restrict", "restrict"], ["access", "access"], ["shared", "shared"], ["function", "function"], ["device", "device"], ["single", "single"], ["process", "process"], ["time", "time"], ["synchronize", "synchronize"], ["coordinate", "coordinate"], ["event", "event"], ["different", "different"]], "raw_glosses": ["(programming) A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"], "topics": ["computing", "engineering", "mathematics", "natural-sciences", "physical-sciences", "programming", "sciences"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfɔː/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"audio": "En-uk-semaphore.oga", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga/En-uk-semaphore.oga.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga"}, {"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfoɹ/", "tags": ["General-American"]}], "translations": [{"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "ro", "lang": "Romanian", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["neuter"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "hy", "lang": "Armenian", "roman": "lusazdanšan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "լուսազդանշան"}, {"code": "ca", "lang": "Catalan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semàfor"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastinjärjestelmä"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "hu", "lang": "Hungarian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "szemafor"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semaforo"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "се̏мафо̄р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sȅmafōr"}, {"code": "es", "lang": "Spanish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semáforo"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "lippuviittoilu"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semaforo marittimo"}, {"alt": "てばたしんがう", "code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "tebata shingō", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "手旗信号"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "flažkóvaja signalizácija", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "флажко́вая сигнализа́ция"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafori"}, {"code": "fr", "lang": "French", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sémaphore"}, {"code": "de", "lang": "German", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "Semaphor"}, {"code": "el", "lang": "Greek", "roman": "simatofóros", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "σηματοφόρος"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "is", "lang": "Icelandic", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["feminine"], "word": "veif"}, {"code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "semafo", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "セマフォ"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sv", "lang": "Swedish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["common-gender"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "tr", "lang": "Turkish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafor"}], "wikipedia": ["semaphore"], "word": "semaphore"}

semaphore (English noun) semaphore/English/noun: invalid uppercase tag Received-Pronunciation not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English countable nouns", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English nouns", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from Ancient Greek", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰer-", "English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰyeh₂-", "English terms prefixed with sema-", "English terms suffixed with -phore", "English uncountable nouns", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 1 entry", "Pages with entries", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hebrew translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Romanian translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Serbo-Croatian translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Turkish translations", "en:Rail transportation"], "derived": [{"word": "flag semaphore"}, {"word": "semaphore flag"}, {"word": "semaphore plant"}, {"word": "semaphore signal"}, {"tags": ["obsolete"], "word": "semaphoretic"}, {"word": "semaphoretical"}, {"word": "semaphoric"}, {"word": "semaphorin"}, {"word": "semaphorist"}], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "en", "2": "ine-pro", "3": "*dʰyeh₂-", "4": "*bʰer-"}, "expansion": "", "name": "root"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "sémaphore"}, "expansion": "French sémaphore", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "σῆμα", "t": "mark, sign, token"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "French -phore", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "grc", "3": "-φόρος", "pos": "suffix indicating a bearer or carrier"}, "expansion": "Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "sema-", "3": "-phore"}, "expansion": "By surface analysis, sema- + -phore", "name": "surf"}], "etymology_text": "The noun is borrowed from French sémaphore, from Ancient Greek σῆμα (sêma, “mark, sign, token”) + French -phore (from Ancient Greek -φόρος (-phóros, suffix indicating a bearer or carrier)). By surface analysis, sema- + -phore.\nThe verb is derived from the noun.", "forms": [{"form": "semaphores", "tags": ["plural"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {"1": "~"}, "expansion": "semaphore (countable and uncountable, plural semaphores)", "name": "en-noun"}], "hyphenation": ["se‧ma‧phore"], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "[1820 January, “Art. II.—Thesaurus Græcæ Linguæ ab H. Stephano [Henry Stephens] constructus. Editio nova, auctior et emendatior. Vol. I. Partes I–IV. Londini, in ædibus Valpianis, 1815–1818. [book review]”, in William Gifford, editor, The Quarterly Review, volume XXII, number XLIV, London: John Murray, […], →OCLC, page 342:", "text": "We must here take the liberty of expostulating with Sir Home [Riggs] Popham and the first Lord of the Admiralty, for having given to the telegraphic machine, invented by that gallant officer, the barbarous name of Semaphore, instead of Sematophore or Semophore—either of them ugly enough.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1821, “[Papers in Mechanics.] No. V. Improved Semaphore.”, in Transactions of the Society, Instituted at London, for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce; […], volume XXXIX, London: Sold by the housekeeper, at the Society’s House, […]; printed by T[homas] C[urson] Hansard, […], →OCLC, page 104:", "text": "The large Silver Medal of the Society was this Session voted to Nic[h]olas Harris Nicolas, Esq. of the Inner Temple, for an Improvement on the Vertical Semaphore, and for his method of adapting a shifting Key to Telegraphic Communications, for the purpose of insuring their Secrecy. A Model of Mr. N's Semaphore has been placed in the Repository of the Society.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1831 October 8, W. Thomas, “[General Correspondence.] Night Signals.”, in The United Service Journal, and Naval and Military Magazine, part III, number 35, London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, […], →OCLC, page 392:", "text": "That the systems of telegraph and semaphore now in use are in a great measure use-less by night, and totally so in a fog, cannot be doubted; and that a mode, both rapid and secret, would could be put into practice at small expense, in fact little more than the first cost, would be of essential utility to the Government of the country adopting it, is equally true.", "type": "quote"}, {"english": "For the Term of His Natural Life", "ref": "1875, Marcus Clarke, “Running the Gauntlet”, in His Natural Life [For the Term of His Natural Life], volume III, London: Richard Bentley and Son, →OCLC, page 27:", "text": "The arms of the semaphore at the settlement were, in fact, gesticulating with comical vehemence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1879, Albert J[ames] Myer, “Semaphores”, in A Manual of Signals for the Use of Signal Officers in the Field, […], Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, →OCLC, pages 193–194:", "text": "When, on long lines of stations, towers or other structures are used, it may be necessary, for greater speed, to sometimes employ semaphores for aerial telegraphy. [...] Semaphores consist of a post with arms. The arms starting with about three feet in length, to be increased one foot for every mile. These arms are made movable by ropes passing over wheels or pulleys, and moved by a crank below.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1895 January–June, Rudyard Kipling, “An Unqualified Pilot”, in Land & Sea Tales for Scouts and Guides, Bombay: The Gresham Publishing Company; London: Macmillan and Co., published August 1919, →OCLC, page 68:", "text": "And so they went down, Jim steering by his father, turn for turn, over the Mayapur Bar, with the semaphores on each bank duly signalling the depth of water, [...]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1906 July 19, “The Wright Telegraph Railroad Signal”, in The Iron Age, volume LXXVIII, New York, N.Y.: David Williams Company […], →OCLC, page 139, column 2:", "text": "It is essentially an emergency device, primarily for use on single track railroads, and is intended to place the control of semaphores at the several stations under the control of the dispatcher. By means of this signal the dispatcher may throw a semaphore to \"stop position\" at any desired point, regardless of the condition of the operator's instrument at that station, that is whether or not the key of his instrument on the dispatcher's wire is open.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1941 April, “Centenary of the Semaphore Signal”, in Railway Magazine, page 171:", "text": "Now, a century later, semaphores and discs are giving place to colour and position lights. What will be the fashion in 2041? Universal continuous cab signalling?", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1968, F[rits] van der Gragt, Europe's Greatest Tramway Network: Tramways in the Rhein–Ruhr Area of Germany (Uitgaven van de Nederlandsche Vereeniging van Belangstellenden in het Spoor- en Tramwegwezen [Publications by the Dutch Association of People Interested in the Rail- and Tramway System]; 4), Leiden: E[vert] J[an] Brill, →OCLC, page 128:", "text": "Travelling by the rural tramway was quite an experience; the small car would bounce about on the bad track like a ship in a rough sea; at some places, there would even be genuine railway semaphore signals controlling the trams.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1995, Sten Thore, “Messages, Images, and Robots”, in The Diversity, Complexity, and Evolution of High Tech Capitalism, Boston, Mass., Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, →ISBN, page 27:", "text": "Innovations in the communications industry often means that existing media become obsolete. There are no semaphores any longer. (Semaphores were used by the French revolutionary armies in the late 1790's to relay information to Paris about their victories in the Savoy.)", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2004 September 25, Terry Pratchett, Going Postal (A Discworld Novel; 33), London: Doubleday, →ISBN; republished London: Corgi Books, Transworld Publishers, 2005 (2014 printing), →ISBN, pages 149–150:", "text": "He had got used to the clacks towers now. Sometimes it seemed as though every roof sprouted one. Most were the new shutter boxes installed by the Grand Trunk Company, but old-fashioned arm semaphores and even signal flags were still well in evidence.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2020 December 2, Paul Bigland, “My weirdest and wackiest Rover yet”, in Rail, page 67:", "text": "Even so, there are only four others in my car after leaving the pretty station at Abergavenny, a haven of old GWR semaphores.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words."], "links": [["equipment", "equipment"], ["used", "used"], ["visual", "visual"], ["signalling", "signalling"], ["flags", "flags"], ["lights", "lights"], ["mechanically", "mechanically"], ["moving", "moving"], ["arms", "arms"], ["represent", "represent"], ["letters", "letters"], ["alphabet", "alphabet"], ["words", "words"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations"], "examples": [{"ref": "1834 October, Charles Blackburn, “XXXV. A Method of Determining the Number of Signals which Can be Made by the Modern Telegraphs.”, in David Brewster, Richard Taylor, Richard Phillips, editors, The London and Edinburgh Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, volume V (Third Series), number 28, London: Printed by Richard Taylor, […], printer to the University of London; sold by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman; [et al.], →OCLC, page 241:", "text": "Its [the article's] object is to furnish a rule for determining the number of distinct signals which can be made by any semaphore, whatever be the number of arms or indicators, of whatever be the number of positions of each arm. In the Cyclopædia of Rees, the number of signals which the semaphores of the line of communication between Paris and Landau were capable of making, is stated to be 823,543, which is no less than 1,274,608 fewer than the real number, an error not arising from the press, but from the principle of computation.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1924 September, Arthur Conan Doyle, “Sidelights on Sherlock Holmes”, in Memories and Adventures, Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown, and Company, →OCLC, page 110:", "text": "Buried treasures are naturally among the problems which have come to Mr. [Sherlock] Holmes. One genuine case was accompanied by a diagram here reproduced. [...] Each Indiaman in those days had its own semaphore code, and it is conjectured that the three marks upon the left are signals from a three-armed semaphore.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2006, Erinn Banting, Inventing the Telephone (Breakthrough Inventions), New York, N.Y., Toronto, Ont.: Crabtree Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 5, column 2:", "text": "A system of communication called semaphore uses flags or flashing lights to send messages over distances. [...] Code flags are less common today but are sometimes used by ships that have lost radio contact.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Katherine Vaz, “Lisbon Story”, in Our Lady of the Artichokes: And Other Portuguese-American Stories, Lincoln, Neb., London: University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN, page 115:", "text": "As always in Lisbon, my heart throbbed semaphores to call Tónio.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2008, Gene Weingarten, “Remembering Harry”, in Old Dogs are the Best Dogs, New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, page 4:", "text": "Consider the wagging tail, the most basic semaphore in dog/human communication.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2010, Jonathan Balcombe, “Communicating”, in Second Nature: The Inner Lives of Animals, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, part II (Coexistence), page 84:", "text": "Semaphore—a system of communicating over long distances by holding the arms or two flags in certain positions—is not a very efficient mode of communication for us. But for the Panamanian golden frog, semaphore is just the ticket. These frogs live near waterfalls, where the constant din renders vocal communication useless. [...] When they want to get someone else's attention, they flash pale patches of skin on their limbs or the webs between their toes.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2014, Bernard F. Dick, “Worlds Elsewhere”, in The President’s Ladies: Jane Wyman and Nancy Davis, Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi, →ISBN, page 215:", "text": "For a half-hour episode, \"The Long Shadow\" was unusually complex, a web spun out of deception and equivocation that untangles when [Ronald] Reagan, transmitting his customized semaphores of concern (ridged brow, pursed lips, pained eyes), divulges the truth: [...]", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore."], "links": [["system", "system"], ["transmit", "transmit"], ["information", "information"], ["two", "two"], ["one", "one"], ["hand", "hand"], ["alphabetic", "alphabetic"], ["numeric", "numeric"], ["code", "code"], ["based", "based"], ["position", "position"], ["signaller", "signaller"], ["flag semaphore", "flag semaphore"]], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"]}, {"categories": ["English terms with quotations", "English terms with usage examples", "en:Programming"], "examples": [{"text": "The thread increments the semaphore to prevent other threads from entering the critical section at the same time.", "type": "example"}, {"ref": "1996, P. Theodoropoulos, G. Manis, P. Tsanakas, G. Papakonstantinou, “Extending Synchronization PVM Mechanisms”, in Arndt Bode, Jack Dongarra, Thomas Ludwig, Vaidy Sunderam, editors, Parallel Virtual Machine – EuroPVM ’96: Third European PVM Conference, Munich, Germany, October 7–9, 1996: Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science; 1156), Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 315:", "text": "Several synchronization techniques have been proposed and many of them have been adopted by parallel and distributed operating systems or parallel programming platforms. [...] Semaphores represent another synchronization technique that is mainly used by traditional stand-alone operating systems.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, David Sklar, Adam Trachtenberg, “Variables”, in Paula Ferguson, editor, PHP Cookbook, Sebastopol, Calif.: O’Reilly & Associates, →ISBN, section 5.6 (Sharing Variables across Processes), page 124:", "text": "A semaphore makes sure that the different processes don't step on each other's toes when they access the shared memory segment. Before a process can use the segment, it needs to get control of the semaphore. When it's done with the segment, it releases the semaphore for another process to grab.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2012, Timothy Mangan, “L1/L2/L3 Memory Cache”, in Windows System Performance through Caching: 15 Ways Caching Improves System Performance (Inside the OS Series), Canton, Mass.: TMurgent Technologies, →ISBN, page 22:", "text": "It is up to the programmer to ensure that if one thread updates multiple dependent memory locations (for example, writing a string, or updating a table) that another thread might read, some protection is put in place to ensure that the two threads don't update and read at the same time. [...] Several techniques are used by programmers to prevent this, including locks, semaphores, and mutexes.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "links": [["programming", "programming#Noun"], ["bit", "bit"], ["token", "token"], ["fragment", "fragment"], ["mechanism", "mechanism"], ["restrict", "restrict"], ["access", "access"], ["shared", "shared"], ["function", "function"], ["device", "device"], ["single", "single"], ["process", "process"], ["time", "time"], ["synchronize", "synchronize"], ["coordinate", "coordinate"], ["event", "event"], ["different", "different"]], "raw_glosses": ["(programming) A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes."], "tags": ["countable", "uncountable"], "topics": ["computing", "engineering", "mathematics", "natural-sciences", "physical-sciences", "programming", "sciences"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfɔː/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"audio": "En-uk-semaphore.oga", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga/En-uk-semaphore.oga.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/En-uk-semaphore.oga"}, {"ipa": "/ˈsɛm.əˌfoɹ/", "tags": ["General-American"]}], "translations": [{"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "ro", "lang": "Romanian", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["neuter"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "equipment used for visual signalling", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "hy", "lang": "Armenian", "roman": "lusazdanšan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "լուսազդանշան"}, {"code": "ca", "lang": "Catalan", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semàfor"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastin"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "opastinjärjestelmä"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "hu", "lang": "Hungarian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "szemafor"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semaforo"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "се̏мафо̄р"}, {"code": "sh", "lang": "Serbo-Croatian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sȅmafōr"}, {"code": "es", "lang": "Spanish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information", "word": "semáforo"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "lippuviittoilu"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "it", "lang": "Italian", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semaforo marittimo"}, {"alt": "てばたしんがう", "code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "tebata shingō", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "word": "手旗信号"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "flažkóvaja signalizácija", "sense": "visual system for transmitting information using flags", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "флажко́вая сигнализа́ция"}, {"code": "cs", "lang": "Czech", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "nl", "lang": "Dutch", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "semafoor"}, {"code": "fi", "lang": "Finnish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafori"}, {"code": "fr", "lang": "French", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "sémaphore"}, {"code": "de", "lang": "German", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "Semaphor"}, {"code": "el", "lang": "Greek", "roman": "simatofóros", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "σηματοφόρος"}, {"code": "he", "lang": "Hebrew", "roman": "semafor", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "סמפור"}, {"code": "is", "lang": "Icelandic", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["feminine"], "word": "veif"}, {"code": "ja", "lang": "Japanese", "roman": "semafo", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "セマフォ"}, {"code": "ru", "lang": "Russian", "roman": "semafór", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["masculine"], "word": "семафо́р"}, {"code": "sv", "lang": "Swedish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "tags": ["common-gender"], "word": "semafor"}, {"code": "tr", "lang": "Turkish", "sense": "mechanism used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time", "word": "semafor"}], "wikipedia": ["semaphore"], "word": "semaphore"}


This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2025-02-22 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2025-02-02 using wiktextract (9e2b7d3 and f2e72e5). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

If you use this data in academic research, please cite Tatu Ylonen: Wiktextract: Wiktionary as Machine-Readable Structured Data, Proceedings of the 13th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC), pp. 1317-1325, Marseille, 20-25 June 2022. Linking to the relevant page(s) under https://kaikki.org would also be greatly appreciated.