para
1a coin and monetary unit of Macedonia and Serbia, one 100th of a dinar.
formerly, a coin and monetary unit of Yugoslavia, one 100th of a dinar.
Origin of para
1Other definitions for para (2 of 10)
a former copper coin of Turkey, the 40th part of a piaster.
Origin of para
2Other definitions for para (3 of 10)
Origin of para
3Other definitions for para (4 of 10)
Origin of para
4Other definitions for para (5 of 10)
Also called parity . a woman's status regarding the bearing of viable offspring: usually followed by a Roman numeral designating the number of times the woman has given birth.
the woman herself.
Origin of para
5- Compare gravida.
Other definitions for para- (6 of 10)
a prefix appearing in loanwords from Greek, most often attached to verbs and verbal derivatives, with the meanings “at or to one side of, beside, side by side” (parabola; paragraph; parallel; paralysis), “beyond, past, by” (paradox; paragogue); by extension from these senses, this prefix came to designate objects or activities auxiliary to or derivative of that denoted by the base word (parody; paronomasia), and hence abnormal or defective (paranoia), a sense now common in modern scientific coinages (parageusia; paralexia). As an English prefix, para-1 may have any of these senses; it is also productive in the naming of occupational roles considered ancillary or subsidiary to roles requiring more training, or of a higher status, on such models as paramedical and paraprofessional: paralegal; paralibrarian; parapolice.
Chemistry. a combining form designating the para (1, 4) position in the benzene ring. Abbreviation: p-.: Compare meta- (def. 4b), ortho- (def. 2b).
Origin of para-
6- Also especially before a vowel, par- .
Other definitions for para- (7 of 10)
a combining form meaning “guard against,” occurring in loanwords from French, or, via French, from Italian: parachute; parasol.
Origin of para-
7Other definitions for para- (8 of 10)
a combining form extracted from parachute, forming compounds denoting persons or things utilizing parachutes or landed by parachute: paradrop; paradoctor; paraglider; paratrooper.
Other definitions for Pará (9 of 10)
an estuary in N Brazil: an arm of the Amazon. 200 miles (320 km) long; 40 miles (65 km) wide.
Other definitions for Para. (10 of 10)
Paraguay.
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
How to use para in a sentence
Today, airplanes mainly hunt submarines by para-dropping a pattern of sonobuoys, most of which are passive listening devices.
The Republicans have called their in-house campaign tech start-up para Bellum Labs.
Republicans Better Mind the Modernity Gap To Catch Up to Clinton | Lloyd Green | March 3, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTAnd your 2005 Sundance short, Victoria para chino, was a pretty big hit.
True Detective Director Cary Fukunaga’s Journey from Pro Snowboarder to Hollywood’s Most Wanted | Marlow Stern | February 26, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTThe superintendent and many of the workers go down the river to para and Manaos or to villages on higher ground.
The Wonder Book of Knowledge | VariousUp to this time, all the rubber was called para rubber, named from the town of para in Brazil, from which all rubber was shipped.
The Wonder Book of Knowledge | Various
Our picture shows a bin of crude up-river para the finest rubber known.
The Wonder Book of Knowledge | VariousMethæmoglobin in the blood smaller than in para-acetamido-phenol, but more than when the methyl or ethyl compound is administered.
Poisons: Their Effects and Detection | Alexander Wynter BlythThe influence of position of an alkyl in the aromatic bodies is well shown in ortho-, para- and meta-derivatives.
Poisons: Their Effects and Detection | Alexander Wynter Blyth
British Dictionary definitions for para (1 of 6)
/ (ˈpɑːrə) /
a monetary unit of Serbia worth one hundredth of a dinar; formerly a monetary unit of Yugoslavia
Origin of para
1British Dictionary definitions for para (2 of 6)
/ (ˈpærə) /
a soldier in an airborne unit
an airborne unit
a paragraph
British Dictionary definitions for para (3 of 6)
/ (ˈpɑːrɑː) /
a New Zealand fern, Marattia salicina, with long heavy fronds: Also called: horseshoe fern, king fern
Origin of para
3British Dictionary definitions for para- (4 of 6)
beside; near: parameter; parathyroid
beyond: parapsychology
resembling: paramnesia
defective; abnormal: paraesthesia
subsidiary to: paraphysis
(usually in italics) denoting that an organic compound contains a benzene ring with substituents attached to atoms that are directly opposite across the ring (the 1,4- positions): paradinitrobenzene; para- cresol Abbreviation: p- Compare ortho- (def. 4), meta- (def. 4)
denoting an isomer, polymer, or compound related to a specified compound: paraldehyde; paracasein
denoting the form of a diatomic substance in which the spins of the two constituent atoms are antiparallel: parahydrogen Compare ortho- (def. 6)
Origin of para-
4British Dictionary definitions for para- (5 of 6)
indicating an object that acts as a protection against something: parachute; parasol
Origin of para-
5British Dictionary definitions for Pará (6 of 6)
/ (Portuguese paˈra) /
a state of N Brazil, on the Atlantic: mostly dense tropical rainforest Capital: Belém. Pop: 6 453 683 (2002). Area: 1 248 042 sq km (474 896 sq miles)
another name for Belém
an estuary in N Brazil into which flow the Tocantins River and a branch of the Amazon. Length: about 320 km (200 miles)
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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