GENERATION


Meaning of GENERATION in English

— generational , adj. — generationally , adv.

/jen'euh ray"sheuhn/ , n.

1. the entire body of individuals born and living at about the same time: the postwar generation.

2. the term of years, roughly 30 among human beings, accepted as the average period between the birth of parents and the birth of their offspring.

3. a group of individuals, most of whom are the same approximate age, having similar ideas, problems, attitudes, etc. Cf. Beat Generation, Lost Generation .

4. a group of individuals belonging to a specific category at the same time: Chaplin belonged to the generation of silent-screen stars.

5. a single step in natural descent, as of human beings, animals, or plants.

6. a form, type, class, etc., of objects existing at the same time and having many similarities or developed from a common model or ancestor: a new generation of computers.

7. the offspring of a certain parent or couple, considered as a step in natural descent.

8. the act or process of generating; procreation.

9. the state of being generated.

10. production by natural or artificial processes; evolution, as of heat or sound.

11. Biol.

a. one complete life cycle.

b. one of the alternate phases that complete a life cycle having more than one phase: the gametophyte generation.

12. Math. the production of a geometrical figure by the motion of another figure.

13. Physics. one of the successive sets of nuclei produced in a chain reaction.

14. (in duplicating processes, as photocopying, film, etc.) the distance in duplicating steps that a copy is from the original work.

[ 1250-1300; ME generacioun generation- (s. of generatio ). See GENERATE, -ION ]

Random House Webster's Unabridged English dictionary.      Полный английский словарь Вебстер - Random House .