释义 |
mod·ule I. \ˈmä(ˌ)jül\ noun (-s) Etymology: Latin modulus small measure, meter, module in architecture, from modus measure + -ulus — more at mete 1. a. archaic : something that serves as a model or pattern : exemplar < the text module is a sentence from … Thoreau — William Beebe > b. obsolete : a counterfeit image < but a clod and module of confounded royalty — Shakespeare > 2. : a standard or unit of measurement 3. a. [French, from Latin modulus] : the size of some one part (as the diameter or semidiameter of the base of a shaft) taken as a unit of measure by which the proportions of the other parts of a classical or nonclassical architectural composition are regulated b. : a unit of size used as a basis for standardizing the design and construction of building parts and materials or articles of furniture < use of dimensional coordination on the four-inch module — R.T.Liddicoat > < fabricated for assembly on a 2-foot module — S.D.Sturgis > 4. a. : a device used for measuring the flow of water or for delivering a fixed volume of water (as in irrigation systems) b. : the volume discharged by such a device 5. : the diameter of a coin, token, or medal 6. : a ratio equal to the pitch diameter of a gear in millimeters divided by the number of teeth in the gear II. noun 1. : any in a series of standardized units for use together: as a. : a unit of furniture or architecture b. : an educational or instructional unit which covers a single subject or a discrete part of a broad subject 2. : an assembly of components that are packaged or mounted together and constitute a functional unit for an electronic or mechanical system < a module for a computer > 3. : an independent unit that constitutes a part of the total structure of a space vehicle < a propulsion module > 4. a. : a subset of an additive group that is also a group under addition b. : a mathematical set that is a commutative group under addition and that is closed under multiplication which is distributive from the left or right or both by elements of a ring and for which a(bx) = (ab)x or (xb)a = x(ba) or both where a and b are elements of the ring and x belongs to the set 5. : a usually semi-independent routine in a computer program that usually corresponds to one step in the solution of the problem the program was designed to solve |