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单词 access
释义

access


access

permission to use, speak with, or enter; a way to approach: Access to the stage is through the back door.
Not to be confused with:excess – an extreme amount or degree: an excess of food and drink; superabundance; immoderate indulgence: A hundred pairs of shoes is an excess.

ac·cess

A0039100 (ăk′sĕs)n.1. A means of approaching, entering, exiting, communicating with, or making use of: a store with easy access. 2. The ability or right to approach, enter, exit, communicate with, or make use of: has access to the restricted area; has access to classified material.3. Public access.4. An increase by addition.5. An outburst or onset: an access of rage.tr.v. ac·cessed, ac·cess·ing, ac·cess·es To obtain access to, especially by computer: used a browser to access a website; accessed her bank account online.
[Middle English acces, a coming to, from Old French, from Latin accessus, past participle of accēdere, to arrive : ad-, ad- + cēdere, to come; see ked- in Indo-European roots.]

access

(ˈæksɛs) n1. the act of approaching or entering2. the condition of allowing entry, esp (of a building or room) allowing entry by wheelchairs, prams, etc3. the right or privilege to approach, reach, enter, or make use of something4. a way or means of approach or entry5. the opportunity or right to see or approach someone: she fights for divorce and free access to her children. 6. (Broadcasting) (modifier) designating programmes made by the general public as distinguished from those made by professional broadcasters: access television. 7. a sudden outburst or attack, as of rage or diseasevb8. to gain access to; make accessible or available9. (Computer Science) (tr) computing a. to obtain or retrieve (information) from a storage deviceb. to place (information) in a storage device. See also direct access, sequential access[C14: from Old French or from Latin accessus an approach, from accēdere to accede]

ac•cess

(ˈæk sɛs)

n. 1. the ability or right to enter or use: They have access to the files. 2. the right or opportunity to approach or speak with. 3. the state or quality of being approachable: The house was difficult of access. 4. a way or means of approach. 5. an attack or onset, as of a disease. 6. a sudden and strong emotional outburst. 7. accession; increase. 8. public-access television. v.t. 9. to make contact with or gain access to. 10. to locate (data) for transfer from one part of a computer system to another. adj. 11. (of television programming, time, etc.) available to the public. [1275–1325; Middle English (< Old French acces) < Latin accessus an approach =acced-, variant s. of accēdere to accede + -tus suffix of v. action]

access


Past participle:
Gerund: accessed
Imperative
access
access
Present
I access
you access
he/she/it accessing
we access
you access
they access
Preterite
I
you
he/she/it
we
you
they
Present Continuous
I am accessed
you are accessed
he/she/it is accessed
we are accessed
you are accessed
they are accessed
Present Perfect
I have
you have
he/she/it has
we have
you have
they have
Past Continuous
I was accessed
you were accessed
he/she/it was accessed
we were accessed
you were accessed
they were accessed
Past Perfect
I had
you had
he/she/it had
we had
you had
they had
Future
I will access
you will access
he/she/it will access
we will access
you will access
they will access
Future Perfect
I will have
you will have
he/she/it will have
we will have
you will have
they will have
Future Continuous
I will be accessed
you will be accessed
he/she/it will be accessed
we will be accessed
you will be accessed
they will be accessed
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been accessed
you have been accessed
he/she/it has been accessed
we have been accessed
you have been accessed
they have been accessed
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been accessed
you will have been accessed
he/she/it will have been accessed
we will have been accessed
you will have been accessed
they will have been accessed
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been accessed
you had been accessed
he/she/it had been accessed
we had been accessed
you had been accessed
they had been accessed
Conditional
I would access
you would access
he/she/it would access
we would access
you would access
they would access
Past Conditional
I would have
you would have
he/she/it would have
we would have
you would have
they would have
Thesaurus
Noun1.access - the right to enteraccess - the right to enter admittance, entree, admission, accessionright - an abstract idea of that which is due to a person or governmental body by law or tradition or nature; "they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights"; "Certain rights can never be granted to the government but must be kept in the hands of the people"- Eleanor Roosevelt; "a right is not something that somebody gives you; it is something that nobody can take away"door - anything providing a means of access (or escape); "we closed the door to Haitian immigrants"; "education is the door to success"
2.access - the right to obtain or make use of or take advantage of something (as services or membership)access - the right to obtain or make use of or take advantage of something (as services or membership)right - an abstract idea of that which is due to a person or governmental body by law or tradition or nature; "they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights"; "Certain rights can never be granted to the government but must be kept in the hands of the people"- Eleanor Roosevelt; "a right is not something that somebody gives you; it is something that nobody can take away"
3.access - a way of entering or leavingaccess - a way of entering or leaving; "he took a wrong turn on the access to the bridge"approachentrance, entranceway, entryway, entree, entry - something that provides access (to get in or get out); "they waited at the entrance to the garden"; "beggars waited just outside the entryway to the cathedral"way - any artifact consisting of a road or path affording passage from one place to another; "he said he was looking for the way out"
4.access - a code (a series of characters or digits) that must be entered in some way (typed or dialed or spoken) to get the use of something (a telephone line or a computer or a local area network etc.)access codecode - a coding system used for transmitting messages requiring brevity or secrecybackdoor, back door - an undocumented way to get access to a computer system or the data it contains
5.access - (computer science) the operation of reading or writing stored informationaccess - (computer science) the operation of reading or writing stored informationmemory accessdisk access - memory access to the computer disk on which information is storedcomputer science, computing - the branch of engineering science that studies (with the aid of computers) computable processes and structuresoperation - (computer science) data processing in which the result is completely specified by a rule (especially the processing that results from a single instruction); "it can perform millions of operations per second"
6.access - the act of approaching or enteringaccess - the act of approaching or entering; "he gained access to the building"coming, approach, approaching - the act of drawing spatially closer to something; "the hunter's approach scattered the geese"back door, backdoor - a secret or underhand means of access (to a place or a position); "he got his job through the back door"
Verb1.access - obtain or retrieve from a storage deviceaccess - obtain or retrieve from a storage device; as of information on a computercomputer science, computing - the branch of engineering science that studies (with the aid of computers) computable processes and structuresrecover, regain, retrieve, find - get or find back; recover the use of; "She regained control of herself"; "She found her voice and replied quickly"address - access or locate by addresslog in, log on, log-in - enter a computer; "Have you logged in lately?"
2.access - reach or gain access toaccess - reach or gain access to; "How does one access the attic in this house?"; "I cannot get to the T.V. antenna, even if I climb on the roof"get atarrive at, reach, attain, gain, hit, make - reach a destination, either real or abstract; "We hit Detroit by noon"; "The water reached the doorstep"; "We barely made it to the finish line"; "I have to hit the MAC machine before the weekend starts"

access

noun1. admission, entry, passage, entrée, admittance, ingress The facilities have been adapted to give access to wheelchair users.2. entrance, road, door, approach, entry, path, gate, opening, way in, passage, avenue, doorway, gateway, portal, passageway a courtyard with a side access to the rear gardensverb1. acquire, get, gather, obtain, net, retrieve, attain, procure You've illegally accessed confidential security files.

access

noun1. The right to enter or make use of:admission, admittance, entrance, entrée, entry, ingress.2. A sudden violent expression, as of emotion:blowup, burst, eruption, explosion, fit, flare-up, gust, outbreak, outburst.3. A sudden and often acute manifestation of a disease:attack, fit, seizure.Informal: spell.
Translations
使用...的权力出入通路通道

access

(ˈӕkses) noun1. way or right of approach or entry. We gained access to the house through a window. 通路 通路2. way or right to meet (someone) or use (something). Senior students have access to the library at weekends. 有方法或有權見到(某人)或使用(某物) 使用...的权力ˈaccess code noun a combination of characters that is used to obtain permission to enter a computer or a communication network. 密碼,存取碼 选(存)取码 acˈcessible adjective (of a person or place) able to be reached or approached easily. His house is not accessible by car. 可親近的,可到的 可接近的,容易取得的,可进入的 acˌcessiˈbility noun 可親近,可到 可接近性,易接近,可到达

access

出入zhCN, 通道zhCN
  • Does the room have wireless internet access? → 房间里能无线上网吗?
  • I need a room with wheelchair access → 我需要一间可供轮椅出入的客房
  • Do you provide access for the disabled? → 有残疾人出入通道吗?

access


access to (someone or something)

The ability to use or reach something or someone, through any number of means. I won't have access to my work email while I'm away on vacation. No, I don't have direct access to the CEO, but I'll call his assistant.See also: access

*access to someone or something

permission to approach someone or something; the right to use someone or something. (*Typically: get ~; have ~; give someone ~.) Can you get access to a computer?See also: access

access


access

[′ak‚ses] (civil engineering) Freedom, ability, or the legal right to pass without obstruction from a given point on earth to some other objective, such as the sea or a public highway. (computer science) The reading of data from storage or the writing of data into storage.

access

(to post-compulsory education) the process of facilitating entry to formal learning for ‘non-traditional’ students (e.g. CLASS, ETHNIC GROUP, AGE GROUP and disability). Theoretically, entry may be hindered in various ways including economically, culturally and institutionally In practice, however, potential entrants may be confronted by a combination of these obstacles. Access researchers are particularly concerned with resisting and criticizing the application of‘deficit’ models to potential entrants. In attempting to explain instances of under- or non-participation such models sometimes ignore wider socio-economic and cultural factors and will look to the individual, claiming, for example, that ‘low aspirations’ are decisive and can be acted on directly See also ACCESS COURSES.

access

A means of approach, e.g., a road, street, or walk.

Access

(language)An English-like query language used in thePick operating system.

Access

(database, product)Microsoft Access.

access

(1) To store data on and retrieve data from a disk or other peripheral device. See access arm, access method and Microsoft Access.

(2) The entrance to the Internet or other online service or network.

(3) In computer security, the opportunity for use of a resource. See logical access and physical access.

access


access

 [ak´ses] a means of approaching something.arteriovenous access the usual type of access" >vascular access, connecting an artery and a vein, usually in the arm.hemodialysis access (vascular access) the means by which hemodialysis" >hemodialysis apparatus is connected to blood vessels; the most common type is access" >arteriovenous access. Other types include access" >venovenous access and types of fistulas and shunts.venovenous access access" >vascular access via a tube that begins at a vein and ends at a vein, used in hemodialysis and hemofiltration" >continuous venovenous hemofiltration.

ac·cess

(ak'ses), Do not confuse this word with assess or axis.1. A way or means of approach or admittance. 2. In dentistry, the space required for visualization and for manipulation of instruments to remove decay and prepare a tooth for restoration. 3. The opening in the crown of a tooth required to allow adequate admittance to the pulp space to clean, shape, and seal the root canal(s). Synonym(s): access opening [L. accessus]

Access

Access
Intensive care/Lab
The ease with which a patient’s circulation (vasculature) can be accessed for drawing blood or administering fluids, nutrients, etc. 
Managed care
(1) The ability of an individual or group of individuals to obtain health insurance.
(2) The ability of an individual to obtain adequate or appropriate health care services; the availability of medical care to a patient, which can be determined by location, transportation, type of medical services in the area, etc.
MedspeakUK A generic UK term referring to the facility with which people receive the information, health care or social services they need and are not discouraged from seeking help.
Access issues Distance travelled; physical access (e.g. premises suitable for wheelchairs); communication (e.g., information in Braille/large print/foreign languages and other formats); and provision of culturally appropriate services.
Psychiatry The ability of an individual or group to receive needed mental health services.
ACCESS
Cardiology
(1) Acute Candesartan Cilexetil Evaluation in Stroke Survivors. An aborted trial that evaluated the pros of immediate blood pressure reduction in patients with acute stroke and severe hypertension.
Conclusion A short course of candesartan after acute stroke reduced cardiovascular mortality and morbidity.
(2) Atorvastatin Comparative Cholesterol Efficacy & Safety Study. A trial comparing the safety and efficacy of 5 statins in reducing LDL cholesterol to the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) target level.
Conclusion Significantly more patients receiving atorvastatin achieved their NCEP goals at 1 year (86%), than with simvastatin (77%), pravastatin (69%), lovastatin (63%) and fluvastatin (54%); no clinically significant tolerability or safety issues were seen with any of the drugs.
(3) A Comparison of Percutaneous Entry Sites for Coronary Angioplasty; A Randomised Comparison of Transradial, Brachial, and Femoral Coronary Angioplasty with 6F Guide Catheters. A trial comparing vascular complications and late clinical outcome of patients undergoing coronary interventions via the radial, brachial or femoral approach.
Primary endpoint Entry-site vascular complications; 1-month MACE (major acute coronary events)
Conclusion Access failure is more common with transradial PTCA; outcomes are otherwise similar.
Pulmonary medicine A Case Control Etiological Study of Sarcoidosis. An epidemiologic study of sarcoidosis. Data from a heterogeneous US population indicate that sarcoidosis tends to improve or remain stable for over 2 years in most patients.

access

Health care 1. The ability of an individual or group of individuals to obtain health insurance.2. The ability of an individual to obtain adequate or appropriate health care services; the availability of medical care to a Pt, which can be determined by location, transportation, type of medical services in the area, etc. See Direct access, Health care access Intensive care See Vascular access. Access to health care, factors in
Geographic or logistic factors,
eg rural communities have poor access to medical attention, due to a relative lack of providers
Finances
or ability to pay for services and
Other factors:
ethnic, social and psychiatric aspects of the person seeking health care
.
.
.

ac·cess

(ak'ses) 1. A way or means of approach or admittance. 2. The space required for visualization and for manipulation of instruments to remove decay and prepare a tooth for restoration. 3. The opening in the crown of a tooth required to allow adequate admittance to the pulp space to clean, shape, and seal the root canal(s) during endodontic or root canal therapy. 4. A patient's entry into health care process; admittance and ability to get care. [L. accessus]

ac·cess

(ak'ses) Do not confuse this word with assess or axis.1. In dentistry, space required for visualization and manipulation of instruments to remove decay and prepare a tooth for restoration. 2. Synonym(s): access cavity. 3. A way or means of approach or admittance.
Synonym(s): access opening.
[L. accessus]

Patient discussion about access

Q. ex-wife works in hospital and accesses my and my familys medical records what can i/we do about this legally this is done without any consent she has computer acess to any records and accesses them upon her ownA. If you are sure of this she is breaking the law...Hippa protects patient right and this is a clear voliation of those right. I suggest you get a copy of the hospitals Right to Privacy , HIPPA paperwork. Then If you can prove this write a letter to hospital admenistration and one to her supervisor and/or director. Let them know you know this is a violation of patient rights and you want it dealt with immediatly or you will seek out legal council. They should responded to your letter in avery timely matter. If you do not have proof discuss with someone in medical record about the "need to know" bases and if ther eis no reason for her to know this information( she could be one tha thas to put it on your records) you would like to be assured she has no access to them and if she is doing a job that would give her the right ask that they please have someone else in the department handle you and your family dure to personal reasons. I encourage you to handle this in a very proffesi

More discussions about access

access


Related to access: Microsoft Access

Access

Freedom of approach or communication; or the means, power, or opportunity of approaching, communicating, or passing to and from. Sometimes importing the occurrence of sexual intercourse; otherwise as importing opportunity of communication for that purpose as between Husband and Wife.

In real property law, the term access denotes the right vested in the owner of the land that adjoins a road or other highway to go and return from his own land to the highway without obstruction. Access to property does not necessarily carry with it possession.

For purposes of establishing element of access by defendant in Copyright infringement action, access is ordinarily defined as opportunity to copy.

Prisoners are entitled to have access to court. Prison officials cannot prevent prisoners from filing papers or appearing in court even if they honestly think that such prevention would help them maintain discipline and good order.

Owners of real property are entitled to some means of access to their property from a road or highway. They do not necessarily need to own a corridor of land from their property to the nearest road, but they may claim an Easement of access.In a paternity suit, access means the opportunity to have had sexual relations. When there is a question about who is the father of a certain child, it is appropriate for a court to determine which man had access to the mother around the estimated time of conception. A man charged with being the father of an illegitimate child may plead the defense of multiple access—that the mother had several lovers at the time of conception.

access

n. 1) in real estate the right and ability to get to the property. 2) when a husband has the opportunity to make love to his wife, it is said he has access. This rather vulgar use of "access" has been important because if a husband "had access" to his wife during the time when she became pregnant, it is presumed he is the father. Modern use of blood tests and DNA studies may show the father to be someone other than the husband whether the husband "had access" or not. (See: egress, paternity suit, DNA)

access

1 the opportunity to see and visit a child in cases where spouses have separated or divorced and care and custody of a child have been awarded to one spouse. The granting of access and the terms on which it is granted are within the discretion of the court. In both England and Scotland the appropriate order would be a contact order. See SECTION 8 ORDER. 2 this term when used in deeds signifies the right to go into a property and, often combined with egress, the right to go out of it.

ACCESS, persons. Approach, or the means or power of approaching. Sometimesby access is understood sexual intercourse; at other times the opportunityof communicating together so that sexual intercourse may have taken place,is also called access. 1 Turn. & R. 141.
2. In this sense a man who can readily be in company with his wife, issaid to have access to her; and in that case, her issue are presumed to behis issue. But this presumption may be rebutted by positive evidence that nosexual intercourse took place. lb.
3. Parents are not allowed to prove non-access, for the purpose ofbastardizing the issue of the wife; nor will their declarations be receivedafter their deaths, to prove the want of access, with a like intent. 1 P. A.Bro. R. App. xlviii.; Rep. tem. Hard. 79; Bull. N. P. 113; Cowp. R. 592; 8East, R. 203; 11 East, R. 133. 2 Munf. R. 242; 3 Munf. R. 599; 7 N. S. 553;4 Hayw R. 221, 3 Hawks, R 623 1 Ashm. R. 269; 6 Binn. R. 283; 3 Paige's R.129; 7 N. S. 548. See Shelf. on Mar. & Div. 711; and Paternity.

Access


Access

The ability or authority to view restricted data or enter a restricted area.
See ALMA Common Software

ACCESS


AcronymDefinition
ACCESSAccessory
ACCESSAssessing Comprehension and Communication in English State-to-State
ACCESSAdvanced Cosmic-Ray Composition Experiment (Space Station)
ACCESSAirCraft Casualty Emotional Support Services
ACCESSArab Community Center for Economic & Social Services (Detroit, Michigan)
ACCESSAssault Care Center (Ames, IA)
ACCESSAlliance Center for Collaboration, Education, Science, and Software
ACCESSAdvocacy Center for Children's Educational Success with Standards
ACCESSAssembly Concept for Construction of Erectable Space Structures
ACCESSArea Cooperative Computerized Educational Service System
ACCESSA Comprehensive Custody Evaluation Standard System
ACCESSAnalysis Computer for Component Engineering Services Support (semiconductors)
ACCESSAlternatives to Combat Child Labor Through Education and Sustainable Services
ACCESSAltera Commitment to Cooperative Engineering Solutions
ACCESSAutomatic Computer Controlled Electronic Scanning System
ACCESSAmerican Computerized Commodity Exchange System and Services (NYMEX)
ACCESSArmy Compassionate Cancer Education Support Services
ACCESSArmy Commissary Computer Entry Store System
ACCESSAegis Configuration Control and Engineering Status System
ACCESSAIDS Counselling Centre and Education Support Services
ACCESSAdvanced Computer Controlled Essential Services Software
ACCESSAcquiring Computer Competencies for Each Student’s Success
ACCESSAfloat Consumption, Cost & Effectiveness Surveillance System
ACCESSAssociation of Community Care, Education and Social Services
ACCESSAutomated Command & Control Executive Support System
ACCESSAircraft Computerized Equipment Support System (Boeing Company)
ACCESSAssembly Concepts for the Construction of Erectable Space Structures (NASA)

access


Related to access: Microsoft Access
  • all
  • noun
  • verb

Synonyms for access

noun admission

Synonyms

  • admission
  • entry
  • passage
  • entrée
  • admittance
  • ingress

noun entrance

Synonyms

  • entrance
  • road
  • door
  • approach
  • entry
  • path
  • gate
  • opening
  • way in
  • passage
  • avenue
  • doorway
  • gateway
  • portal
  • passageway

verb acquire

Synonyms

  • acquire
  • get
  • gather
  • obtain
  • net
  • retrieve
  • attain
  • procure

Synonyms for access

noun the right to enter or make use of

Synonyms

  • admission
  • admittance
  • entrance
  • entrée
  • entry
  • ingress

noun a sudden violent expression, as of emotion

Synonyms

  • blowup
  • burst
  • eruption
  • explosion
  • fit
  • flare-up
  • gust
  • outbreak
  • outburst

noun a sudden and often acute manifestation of a disease

Synonyms

  • attack
  • fit
  • seizure
  • spell

Synonyms for access

noun the right to enter

Synonyms

  • admittance
  • entree
  • admission
  • accession

Related Words

  • right
  • door

noun the right to obtain or make use of or take advantage of something (as services or membership)

Related Words

  • right

noun a way of entering or leaving

Synonyms

  • approach

Related Words

  • entrance
  • entranceway
  • entryway
  • entree
  • entry
  • way

noun a code (a series of characters or digits) that must be entered in some way (typed or dialed or spoken) to get the use of something (a telephone line or a computer or a local area network etc

Synonyms

  • access code

Related Words

  • code
  • backdoor
  • back door

noun (computer science) the operation of reading or writing stored information

Synonyms

  • memory access

Related Words

  • disk access
  • computer science
  • computing
  • operation

noun the act of approaching or entering

Related Words

  • coming
  • approach
  • approaching
  • back door
  • backdoor

verb obtain or retrieve from a storage device

Related Words

  • computer science
  • computing
  • recover
  • regain
  • retrieve
  • find
  • address
  • log in
  • log on
  • log-in

verb reach or gain access to

Synonyms

  • get at

Related Words

  • arrive at
  • reach
  • attain
  • gain
  • hit
  • make
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