byte
Americannoun
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adjacent bits, usually eight, processed by a computer as a unit.
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the combination of bits used to represent a particular letter, number, or special character.
noun
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a group of bits, usually eight, processed as a single unit of data
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the storage space in a memory or other storage device that is allocated to such a group of bits
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a subdivision of a word
Usage
The word bit is short for binary digit. A bit consists of one of two values, usually 0 or 1. Computers use bits because their system of counting is based on two options: switches on a microchip that are either on or off. Thus, a computer counts to seven in bits as follows: 0, 1, 10 [2], 11 [3], 100 [4], 101 [5], 110 [6], 111 [7]. Notice that the higher the count, the more adjacent bits are needed to represent the number. For example, it requires two adjacent bits to count from 0 to 3, and it takes three adjacent bits to count from 0 to 7. A sequence of bits can represent not just numbers but other kinds of data, such as the letters and symbols on a keyboard. The sequence of 0s and 1s that make up data are usually counted in groups of 8, and these groups of 8 bits are called bytes. In origin byte is simply a respelling of bite, a byte being the number of bits that a computer can take at one bite, so to speak. The spelling change was intended to avoid confusion in written documents, since bite becomes identical to bit if the e at the end of bite is accidentally dropped. To transmit one keystroke on a typical keyboard requires one byte of information (or 8 bits). To transmit a three-letter word requires three bytes of information (or 24 bits).
Other Word Forms
Noun Inflected Forms
Etymology
Origin of byte
First recorded in 1959; origin uncertain
Explanation
A byte is a term for a unit of measurement on a computer. If you own a computer, then it's likely that it holds at least a byte of memory. Byte might refer to a unit of information or of storage space on a computer. Many computer operations involve a certain amount of bytes working per second or per minute. The word byte is related to another computer term, a bit, which is an even smaller piece of information; eight bits form one byte. The related words megabyte and gigabyte both have a whole lot of bytes — and even more bits.
Vocabulary lists containing byte
Computer Science and Technology - Middle School
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Computer Science and Technology - High School
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Anything But Typical
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
See Examples For:
He included the bite mark for scale to set the apple apart from similar round fruit like cherries -- learning only later it was a homonym for the computer term "byte".
From Barron's ● Mar. 29, 2026
He was a darling of business journalists because of his accessibility and willingness to give a quick byte or quote, and his views were much sought after.
From BBC ● Dec. 29, 2022
Nothing’s press release says the Phone 1’s Nothing OS will distill Android to “just the essentials, where every byte has a purpose.”
From The Verge ● Mar. 23, 2022
The reality, they patiently say, is more nuanced and complicated than a tweet or a talk-radio sound byte.
From Seattle Times ● Nov. 12, 2021
The byte or bit is a man-made invention, but the theory of digitized information that underlies it is a beautiful natural law.
From "The Gene" by Siddhartha Mukherjee
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The 216 tape, because it was 216 bytes, you know.
From The Wall Street Journal ● Feb. 10, 2026
“You would be shocked what he knows about bits and bytes and all the productivity potentially enhancing things of AI in detail,” Druckenmiller said.
From Barron's ● Jan. 30, 2026
When it ran out of powdered carbon, this chip, which only had 60 bytes of memory, would flip from a program that said I am full to a program that said I’m empty.
From Slate ● Oct. 13, 2025
The whole house of digital bits and bytes will come crashing down.
From Salon ● Jan. 28, 2025
Ever transcribed 141 random bytes, one-half of a byte at a time?
From "The Martian" by Andy Weir
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.