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client
[ klahy-uhnt ]
noun
- a person or group that uses the professional advice or services of a lawyer, accountant, advertising agency, architect, etc.
- a person who is receiving the benefits, services, etc., of a social welfare agency, a government bureau, etc.
- a customer.
- anyone under the patronage of another; a dependent.
- Computers. a computer or an application on a computer that communicates with a remote server:
Exit the program before installing the patch to update the client.
- (in ancient Rome) a plebeian who lived under the patronage of a patrician.
adjective
- being a regular customer:
a client company.
- economically, and often militarily, dependent upon a more prosperous, more powerful nation.
client
/ ˈklaɪə²Ô³Ù; klaɪˈɛntÉ™l /
noun
- a person, company, etc, that seeks the advice of a professional man or woman
- a customer
- a person who is registered with or receiving services or financial aid from a welfare agency
- computing a program or work station that requests data or information from a server
- a person depending on another's patronage
client
/ °ì±ôī′ə²Ô³Ù /
- A program that runs on a personal computer or workstation connected to a computer network and requests information from a file server.
Derived Forms
- cliental, adjective
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³¦±ô¾±Â·±ð²Ô·³Ù²¹±ô [klahy-, en, -tl, klahy, -, uh, n-tl], adjective
- ²Ô´Ç²Ô·³¦±ô¾±î€½Ä²Ô³Ù adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of client1
Example Sentences
Mr Bourne, 51, spent five years offering self-defence classes to children and young people for free, and continued to coach some clients on a private basis.
They shipped the bats to their Yankees clients, but were unsure if the idea would catch on in baseball’s mainstream.
Prosecutors, for their part, derided Sanders in court and to the press as a desperate hack willing to lie to defend Scott Dekraai, a client accused of massacring eight people at a Seal Beach salon.
The prolonged back-and-forth has unsettled companies, both those that import goods from abroad and those that sell their products to foreign clients.
Raffaele Leone, Mr Argentino's lawyer, told Italian media on Wednesday that his client had admitted the charges against him, but had not explained why he had attacked her.
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