something that one's efforts or actions are intended to attain or accomplish; purpose; goal; target: the objective of a military attack;the objective of a fund-raising drive.
Grammar.
Also called ob·jec·tive case[uhb-jek-tiv keys] /əbˈdʒɛk tɪv ˈkeɪs/ .(in English and some other languages) a case specialized for the use of a form as the object of a transitive verb or of a preposition, as him in The boy hit him, or me in He comes to me with his troubles.
a word in that case.
Also called object glass, object lens, ob·jec·tive lens[uhb-jek-tiv lenz] /əbˈdʒɛk tɪv ˈlɛnz/ .Optics. (in a telescope, microscope, camera, or other optical system) the lens or combination of lenses that first receives the rays from the object and forms the image in the focal plane of the eyepiece, as in a microscope, or on a plate or screen, as in a camera.
adjective
being the object or goal of one's efforts or actions.
not influenced by personal feelings, interpretations, or prejudice; based on facts; unbiased: an objective opinion.
intent upon or dealing with things external to the mind rather than with thoughts or feelings, as a person or a book.
being the object of perception or thought; belonging to the object of thought rather than to the thinking subject (opposed to subjective).
of or relating to something that can be known, or to something that is an object or a part of an object; existing independent of thought or an observer as part of reality.
Grammar.
pertaining to the use of a form as the object of a transitive verb or of a preposition.
(in English and some other languages) noting the objective case.
similar to such a case in meaning.
(in case grammar) pertaining to the semantic role of a noun phrase that denotes something undergoing a change of state or bearing a neutral relation to the verb, as the rock in The rock moved or in The child threw the rock.
being part of or pertaining to an object to be drawn: an objective plane.
Medicine/Medical. (of a symptom) discernible to others as well as the patient.
Origin of objective
First recorded in 1610–20; from Medieval Latin objectīvus, equivalent to Latin object(us) (see object) + -īvus adjective suffix (see -ive)
Koenig has not been a sterile, objective narrator; she has openly voiced her biases, concerns, and gut feelings all along.
Adnan Killed Her! No, Jay Did It! Serial’s Uncertain, True-to-Reality End|Emily Shire|December 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Certainly that was the objective of the attack: The school is a private one run by the army for the children of soldiers.
Taliban: We Slaughtered 100+ Kids Because Their Parents Helped America|Sami Yousafzai|December 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Carles told me that MormonThink strives to be objective and impartial.
God vs. the Internet. And the Winner is…|Michael Schulson|November 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
That was really the objective of the first season, especially.
‘Homeland’ Creator Talks Season 4’s ‘Reboot,’ Life After Brody, and How ISIS Will Affect the Show|Marlow Stern|October 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Soon it became clear that establishing a Caliphate was their objective.
Watching ISIS Come to Power Again|Elliot Ackerman|September 7, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The second step is the induction of the child into the objective forms of worship established in some positive religion.
Pedagogics as a System|Karl Rosenkranz
The soul in the masculine body is for the time being getting experiences of the outer, objective activities.
Elementary Theosophy|L. W. Rogers
Thus has education ceased to be an objective standard, created by one age and handed down rigidly immobile to the ages succeeding.
The New Education|Scott Nearing
The second factor of "objective equivalence" is even more questionable than the first.
Distributive Justice|John A. (John Augustine) Ryan
It is the subjective view as opposed to the objective views of the critics.
Complete Prose Works|Walt Whitman
British Dictionary definitions for objective
objective
/ (əbˈdʒɛktɪv) /
adjective
existing independently of perception or an individual's conceptionsare there objective moral values?
undistorted by emotion or personal bias
of or relating to actual and external phenomena as opposed to thoughts, feelings, etc
med(of disease symptoms) perceptible to persons other than the individual affected
grammardenoting a case of nouns and pronouns, esp in languages having only two cases, that is used to identify the direct object of a finite verb or preposition and for various other purposes. In English the objective case of pronouns is also used in many elliptical constructions (as in Poor me! Who, him?), as the subject of a gerund (as in It was me helping him), informally as a predicate complement (as in It's me), and in nonstandard use as part of a compound subject (as in John, Larry, and me went fishing)See also accusative
of, or relating to a goal or aim
noun
the object of one's endeavours; goal; aim
Also called: objective pointmilitarya place or position towards which forces are directed
an actual phenomenon; reality
grammar
the objective case
a word or speech element in the objective case
Also called: object glassoptics
the lens or combination of lenses nearest to the object in an optical instrument
the lens or combination of lenses forming the image in a camera or projector
The lens or lenses in the lower end of a microscope or other optical instrument that first receives light rays from the object being examined and forms its image.
adj.
Based on observable phenomena; presented factually.
Indicating a symptom or condition perceived as a sign of disease by someone other than the person affected.