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ex·ten·sion ( k-st n sh n)n.1. The act of extending or the condition of being extended. 2. The amount, degree, or range to which something extends or can extend: The wire has an extension of 50 feet. 3. a. The act of straightening or extending a limb. b. The position assumed by an extended limb. 4. Medicine The application of traction to a fractured or dislocated limb to restore the normal position. 5. a. An addition that increases the area, influence, operation, or contents of something: an extension for the vacuum cleaner; built a new extension onto the hospital wing. b. An additional telephone connected to a main line. 6. a. An allowance of extra time, as for the repayment of a debt. b. The period of this extra time: three months' extension on the loan. 7. The property of an object by which it occupies space. 8. A program in a university, college, or school that offers instruction, as by television or correspondence, to persons unable to attend at the usual time or in the usual place. 9. Logic The class of objects designated by a specific term or concept; denotation. 10. Mathematics A set that includes a given and similar set as a subset. 11. Computer Science A set of characters that follow a filename and are separated from it by a period, used to identify the kind of file: In most operating systems, file names having the extension .EXE are executable files.
[Middle English extensioun, from Old French extension, from Latin ext nsi , ext nsi n-, from ext nsus, past participle of extendere, to extend; see extend.]
ex·ten sion·al adj. |
extension Noun 1. a room or rooms added to an existing building 2. a development that includes or affects more people or things than before: an extension of democracy within the EU 3. an additional telephone connected to the same line as another 4. an extra period of time in which something continues to exist or be valid: an extension of the contract for another 2 years Adjective 1. denoting something that can be extended or that extends another object: an extension ladder 2. of or relating to the provision of teaching and other facilities by a school or college to people who cannot attend full-time courses
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | extension - a mutually agreed delay in the date set for the completion of a job or payment of a debt; "they applied for an extension of the loan" | | 2. | extension - act of expanding in scope; making more widely available; "extension of the program to all in need"spreading, spread - act of extending over a wider scope or expanse of space or time stretch - extension to or beyond the ordinary limit; "running at full stretch"; "by no stretch of the imagination"; "beyond any stretch of his understanding" | | 3. | extension - the spreading of something (a belief or practice) into new regions | | 4. | extension - an educational opportunity provided by colleges and universities to people who are not enrolled as regular students | | 5. | extension - act of stretching or straightening out a flexed limbstretching - act of expanding by lengthening or widening flexion, flexure - act of bending a joint; especially a joint between the bones of a limb so that the angle between them is decreased | | 6. | extension - a string of characters beginning with a period and followed by one or more letters; the optional second part of a PC computer filename; "most applications provide extensions for the files they create"; "most BASIC files use the filename extension .BAS"string - a linear sequence of symbols (characters or words or phrases) | | 7. | extension - the most direct or specific meaning of a word or expression; the class of objects that an expression refers to; "the extension of `satellite of Mars' is the set containing only Demos and Phobos"meaning, substance - the idea that is intended; "What is the meaning of this proverb?" | | 8. | extension - the ability to raise the working leg high in the air; "the dancer was praised for her uncanny extension"; "good extension comes from a combination of training and native ability"property - a basic or essential attribute shared by all members of a class; "a study of the physical properties of atomic particles" dance - an artistic form of nonverbal communication | | 9. | extension - amount or degree or range to which something extends; "the wire has an extension of 50 feet"longness - the property of being of long spatial extent; "one gene causes shortness and the other causes longness" | | 10. | extension - an additional telephone set that is connected to the same telephone linephone, telephone, telephone set - electronic equipment that converts sound into electrical signals that can be transmitted over distances and then converts received signals back into sounds; "I talked to him on the telephone" | | 11. | extension - an addition to the length of somethingadd-on, addition, improver - a component that is added to something to improve it; "the addition of a bathroom was a major improvement"; "the addition of cinnamon improved the flavor" | | 12. | extension - an addition that extends a main buildingadd-on, addition, improver - a component that is added to something to improve it; "the addition of a bathroom was a major improvement"; "the addition of cinnamon improved the flavor" building, edifice - a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place; "there was a three-story building on the corner"; "it was an imposing edifice" ell - an extension at the end and at right angles to the main building |
extension noun 1. annexe, wing, addition, supplement, branch, appendix, add-on, adjunct, appendage, ell, addendum 3. development, expansion, widening, increase, stretching, broadening, continuation, enlargement, diversification, amplification, elongation, augmentation
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