WikiWord

English

mod

/mɒd/ · noun

Meaning

  1. An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses.
  2. A 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker.
  3. A modification.
  4. An end user-created package containing modifications to the look or behaviour of a video game.
  5. A moderator, for example on a discussion forum.
  6. A module (file containing a tracker music sequence).
  7. To modify (an object) from its original condition, typically for the purposes of individualizing and/or enhancing the performance of the object.
  8. To moderate; to silence or punish (a rule-breaking user) on a forum, especially when done by a moderator.
  9. One of several ancient Greek scales.
  10. One of several common scales in modern Western music, one of which corresponds to the modern major scale and one to the natural minor scale.
  11. A particular means of accomplishing something.
  12. A particular state of being, or frame of mind.
  13. The most frequently occurring value in a distribution
  14. A state of a system that is represented by an eigenfunction of that system.
  15. Style or fashion; popular trend.
  16. Not excessive; acting in moderation
  17. Mediocre
  18. Average priced; standard-deal
  19. Not violent or rigorous; temperate; mild; gentle.
  20. Having an intermediate position between liberal and conservative.
  21. The base with respect to which a congruence is computed.
  22. The absolute value of a complex number.
  23. A coefficient that expresses how much of a certain property is possessed by a certain substance.
  24. An operator placed between two numbers, to get the remainder of the division of those numbers.
  25. A festival of Scottish Gaelic song, arts and culture, akin to the Welsh eisteddfod.

Etymology / origin

No prose etymology has been added yet.

No ancestor words have been linked yet.

Related words

Descendant words

No descendant words have been linked yet.

Sources

  1. DictionaryAPI.dev English dictionary data