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Artifact   /ˈɑrtəfˌækt/   Listen
noun
Artifact  n.  
1.
(Archaeol.) A product of human workmanship; applied esp. to the simpler products of aboriginal art as distinguished from natural objects.
Synonyms: artefact.
2.
Any product of human workmanship; applied both to objects made for practical purposes as well as works of art. It is contrasted to natural object, i.e. anything produced by natural forces without the intervention of man.
Synonyms: artefact.
3.
(Biol.) A structure or appearance in protoplasm due to death, method of preparation of specimens, or the use of reagents, and not present during life.
Synonyms: artefact.
4.
(Technology) An object, oservation, phenomenon, or result arising from hidden or unexpected causes extraneous to the subject of a study, and therefore spurious and having potential to lead one to an erroneous conclusion, or to invalidate the study. In experimental science, artifacts may arise due to inadvertant contamination of equipment, faulty experimental design or faulty analysis, or unexpected effects of agencies not known to affect the system under study.
Synonyms: artefact.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Artifact" Quotes from Famous Books



... not-logic," Gibson said. "If it's a Terran artifact, we can discover the reason for its presence. ...
— Control Group • Roger Dee

... this degeneration is the subordination of literature and content to language study. Grammar arises in the old age of language. As once applied to our relatively grammarless tongue it always was more or less of a school-made artifact and an alien yoke, and has become increasingly so as English has grown great and free. Its ghost, in the many textbooks devoted to it, lacks just the quality of logic which made and besouled it. Philology, too, with all its magnificence, is not a product of the nascent stages of speech. ...
— Youth: Its Education, Regimen, and Hygiene • G. Stanley Hall



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