[syn: condition, status]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Status \Sta"tus\ (st[=a]"t[u^]s), n. [L.]
State; condition; position of affairs.
[1913 Webster] Status in quo
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
status
n 1: the relative position or standing of things or especially
persons in a society; "he had the status of a minor"; "the
novel attained the status of a classic"; "atheists do not
enjoy a favorable position in American life" [syn:
status, position]
2: a state at a particular time; "a condition (or state) of
disrepair"; "the current status of the arms negotiations"
[syn: condition, status]
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0:
99 Moby Thesaurus words for "status":
angle, base, bearings, blood, bracket, branch, cachet, caliber,
capacity, case, caste, category, character, circumstance, clan,
class, condition, consequence, dignity, distance, distinction,
division, echelon, eminence, estate, face, fix, footing, grade,
ground, group, grouping, head, heading, hierarchy, high place,
importance, jam, kin, kudos, label, level, location, lot, merit,
modality, mode, order, part, pass, perspective, pickle, pigeonhole,
place, plight, position, post, posture, power structure,
precedence, predicament, prestige, prominence, quality, race, rank,
rate, rating, relation, renown, reputation, repute, role, rubric,
seat, section, sept, set, significance, situation, sphere, spot,
stage, stand, standing, state, state of affairs, station, stature,
status quo, strain, stratum, subdivision, subgroup, suborder,
title, venue, viewpoint, worth
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):
status
1. A description of how something is, similar to
state but usually implying a simpler set of possibilities,
e.g. up or down; set or clear; stopped, starting, started,
stopping.
In CPU hardware, the status register stores bits of
information about the outcome of previous operations,
e.g. zero, overflow. These status bits can be used to
control conditional execution, e.g. "branch if zero". The
same idea is common in other hardware, e.g. an input
peripheral with a status bit to indicate end of file.
2. Under the Unix operating system, a
process terminates with an exit status - an integer value
where zero indicates successful or normal completion and
non-zero values indicate different error conditions.
3. Standards and other forms of documentation can
have different statuses such as "proposal", request for
comments or accepted by some official body.
(2018-09-01)
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856):
STATUS. The condition of persons. It also means estate, because it signifies
the condition or circumstances in which the owner stands with regard to his
property. 2 Bouv. Inst. n. 1689.