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Host   /hoʊst/   Listen
Host

noun
1.
A person who invites guests to a social event (such as a party in his or her own home) and who is responsible for them while they are there.
2.
A vast multitude.  Synonyms: horde, legion.
3.
An animal or plant that nourishes and supports a parasite; it does not benefit and is often harmed by the association.  Antonym: parasite.
4.
A person who acts as host at formal occasions (makes an introductory speech and introduces other speakers).  Synonyms: emcee, master of ceremonies.
5.
Archaic terms for army.  Synonym: legion.
6.
Any organization that provides resources and facilities for a function or event.
7.
(medicine) recipient of transplanted tissue or organ from a donor.
8.
The owner or manager of an inn.  Synonyms: boniface, innkeeper.
9.
A technical name for the bread used in the service of Mass or Holy Communion.
10.
(computer science) a computer that provides client stations with access to files and printers as shared resources to a computer network.  Synonym: server.
verb
1.
Be the host of or for.



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Host" Quotes from Famous Books



... not tell me of it, dame," said the Miller, "since I was there myself, and made two pair of legs (and these were not mine, but my mare's,) worth one pair of hands. I judged how it would be, when I saw our host break ranks, with rushing on through that broken ploughed field, and so as they had made a pricker of me, I e'en pricked off with myself ...
— The Monastery • Sir Walter Scott

... place, was a rude stone structure, with a flat terrace roof. Coarse felt carpets were spread for our seats in the open court, and a formal welcome was given us; but it was evidently not a very cordial one. My Turkish cavass understood the reason, and at once removed it. Our host had mistaken me for a Mahometan towards whom the Yezidees cherish a settled aversion. As soon as I was introduced to him as a Christian, and he had satisfied himself that this was my true character, his whole deportment was changed. He at once gave me a new and cordial welcome, and set about supplying ...
— The Book of Religions • John Hayward

... precedes the dinner is always proportioned to the grandeur of the occasion, and varies from two days to two weeks. To an invitation received less than two days in advance, you will lose little by replying in the negative, for as it was probably sent as soon as the preparations of the host commenced, you may be sure that there will be little on the table fit to eat. Those abominations, y'clept "plain family dinners," eschew ...
— The Laws of Etiquette • A Gentleman

... shoulder only, holding on by the porter's whiskers; and though some of our party were of the tallest and fattest men whereof our race is composed, and their living sedans exceedingly meagre and small, yet all were landed without accident upon the juicy sand, and forthwith surrounded by a host of mendicants, screaming, "I say, sir! penny, sir! I say, English! tam your ays! penny!" in all voices, from extreme youth to the most lousy and venerable old age. When it is said that these beggars were as ragged ...
— Notes on a Journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo • William Makepeace Thackeray

... his obvious lack of cheerfulness, his namesake and host suggested various diversions,—fishing for congers and rock-fish, a voyage round the island, a trip across to Herm, a day among the rabbits on. Brecqhou. But he wanted none of them. His life was flapping on a broken wing and all he wanted ...
— Pearl of Pearl Island • John Oxenham


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