different between tab vs blotter

tab

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tæb/, [t?æb?]
  • Rhymes: -æb

Etymology 1

First attested 1607, of uncertain origin.

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. A small flap or strip of material attached to something, for holding, manipulation, identification, opening etc.
    • 1993, Irvine Welsh: Trainspotting, p 333:
      He pulls off his belt, cursing as the studs catch in the tabs of his jeans.
  2. (slang) An ear.
  3. (by extension, graphical user interface) A navigational widget, resembling a physical tab, for switching between documents or sets of controls.
  4. (graphical user interface) The page or form associated with such a navigational widget.
    How many tabs are open in your Web browser?
  5. (British Army, military slang) A fast march or run with full kit.

Verb

tab (third-person singular simple present tabs, present participle tabbing, simple past and past participle tabbed)

  1. (transitive) To affix with tabs; to label.
Derived terms
  • keep tabs on
  • tabbed
Translations

Etymology 2

Apocopation (shortening) of (variously) tabulate, tabulator, or tabulation.

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. (informal, chiefly Canada, US) A restaurant bill.
  2. (informal, chiefly Canada, US) Credit account, e.g., in a shop or bar; slate
  3. (by extension) The cost or bill for anything.
    • 1984, Time (volume 123, issue 1)
      Moreover, at a tab of $9 million, the system's price is about $1 million less than a conventional heating-cooling plant []
  4. (computing) A space character that extends to the next aligned column, traditionally used for tabulation.
    Synonym: tabulator

Verb

tab (third-person singular simple present tabs, present participle tabbing, simple past and past participle tabbed)

  1. (computing) To use the Tab key on a computer to advance the cursor or move the input focus, or on a typewriter to advance the carriage.
    • 2010, Chris Anderson, Pro Business Applications with Silverlight 4 (page 210)
      You can prevent a control from getting the focus when the user is tabbing between controls by settings its IsTabStop property to False.
Derived terms
  • pick up the tab
  • tabbed
Translations

Etymology 3

Likely to have been formed by clipping the Geordie pronunciation of the word tobacco or alternatively from the brand name Ogden's Tabs.

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. (Britain, regional, Tyneside and Mackem) A cigarette.
    Giv'is a tab man!
Translations

References

  • Frank Graham (1987) The New Geordie Dictionary, ?ISBN

Etymology 4

Clipping of tablature

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. A form of musical notation indicating fingering rather than the pitch of notes, commonly used for stringed instruments.
Translations

Etymology 5

Clipping of Cantab, from Cantabrigian, from Latin Cantabrigia (Cambridge).

Alternative forms

  • Tab

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. (British slang) A student of Cambridge University.

Etymology 6

Clipping of tabloid.

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. (colloquial) A tabloid newspaper.
    • 1999, George H. Douglas, The Golden Age of the Newspaper, p. 229:
      By 1926 the tabloid mania was at full tilt, and the tabs in New York went at each other with hammer and tong.
    • 2010, Robert Lusetich, Unplayable: An Inside Account of Tiger's Most Tumultuous Season:
      That is the attitude of the tabs: they cover the world's most important city.

Etymology 7

Clipping of tablet.

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. (informal) A tablet, especially one containing illicit drugs.
Translations

Etymology 8

Noun

tab (plural tabs)

  1. (informal, theater) A tableau curtain.

Derived terms

  • tabless

Anagrams

  • ABT, ATB, B.T.A., BAT, BTA, Bat-, TBA, abt, abt., bat

Danish

Etymology 1

Derived from the verb tabe (to lose).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?t?æ?b?]

Noun

tab n (singular definite tabet, plural indefinite tab)

  1. loss
  2. casualty
Declension

Etymology 2

See the etymology of the main entry.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?t?æ?b?], (colloquial) IPA(key): [?t?æw?]

Verb

tab

  1. imperative of tabe

Volapük

Etymology

Borrowed from English table (table ? tab; compare French: table, Latin: tabula, Interlingua: tabula, Esperanto: tablo, Ido: tablo).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [tab]

Noun

tab (nominative plural tabs)

  1. table (item of furniture)

Declension

Derived terms

Related terms

  • taib

tab From the web:

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  • what tablet should i get
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  • what table represents a function
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blotter

English

Etymology

blot +? -er

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?t?(r)

Noun

blotter (plural blotters)

  1. A piece of blotting paper in a pad as a piece of desk furniture.
    Synonym: desk pad
  2. (law enforcement) A daily register of arrests and other events in a police station: a police blotter.
  3. A register of the related events made in the form of the list of times and brief descriptions.
    All transactions were entered in the cash blotter and agent's subsidiary ledger.
    He maintains the political blotter blog.
    • 2003, Karen Hood-Caddy, The Wisdom of Water
      "The blotter was so full of his scribbling, it was getting harder and harder to find places to write in."
  4. (slang) A portion of blotter acid.
    • 2012, Alex Wyndham Baker, Cursive
      Glass bottles of liquid LSD; moist blocks of Manali charras and Malana cream; sachets of smack; a hundred caps of MDMA and a phial of Australian DMT; ampoules of medical morphine and a dense pad of four thousand Californian blotters.

Derived terms

  • blotter acid
  • blottery
  • police blotter
  • trade blotter

Translations

References

  • blotter at OneLook Dictionary Search
  • blotter in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • blotter on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Roblett, Tolbert, bottler

Danish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?b?l?d??]

Etymology 1

From blotte (to expose) +? er.

Noun

blotter c (singular definite blotteren, plural indefinite blottere)

  1. flasher, exhibitionist (a person exposing his or her genitalia in public)
Declension

Further reading

  • “blotter” in Den Danske Ordbog

Etymology 2

See the etymology of the main entry.

Verb

blotter

  1. present of blotte

blotter From the web:

  • what blotter means
  • what's blotter in spanish
  • blotter what does mean
  • what is blotter paper
  • what is blotter art
  • what is blotter acid
  • what is blotter report in the philippines
  • what is blotter paper made of
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