Advertisement
Advertisement
proxy
[prok-see]
noun
plural
proxiesthe agency, function, or power of a person authorized to act as the deputy or substitute for another.
a person authorized to act as a deputy or substitute for another; agent.
a written authorization empowering another person to vote or act for the signer, such as at a meeting of stockholders.
an ally or confederate who can be relied upon to speak or act in one's behalf.
Computer.
a server or program that receives requests, filters them, and forwards them to a network on behalf of another computer or network which it represents under a surrogate IP address: used to provide anonymity or increased security or to carry out intermediate processing.
a placeholder programming object whose function is to delegate the execution of an action to one or more other objects it controls access to, allowing the placeholder to carry out other processing before and after that action.
adjective
relating to or having the agency, function, or power of a person authorized to act as the deputy or substitute for another.
If you are unable to reach the polls, you can choose a proxy voter to cast your ballot for you.
Because of the distance to be traveled, a proxy groom stood in for the queen's future husband.
(especially of a conflict) occurring between states, people, etc., who are directed, influenced, or funded by other states, people, etc..
Proxy wars were a major feature of the Cold War.
The new CEO won control of the company after a proxy battle.
proxy
/ ˈprɒksɪ /
noun
a person authorized to act on behalf of someone else; agent
to vote by proxy
the authority, esp in the form of a document, given to a person to act on behalf of someone else
computing short for proxy server
proxy
A person authorized to act for another, or the written authorization to act for another.
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of proxy1
Example Sentences
Seen in the larger context of Xi’s global ambitions, this means the Ukraine war has become a proxy conflict between the U.S. and China.
Tobias Adrian, the head of the IMF division that tracks markets, agreed the rise in gold prices is a proxy for investors dealing with uncertainty.
“In periods where investors chase returns in the gold proxies, when those metals weaken, it often bodes ill for gold prices as well.”
So it is this week as the proxy advisory firm Glass Lewis said it will stop providing cookie-cutter recommendations to institutions on how to vote their shares in corporations.
"What I think is toxic at the moment is by not setting out the conditions every single election becomes a kind of proxy for a border poll."
Advertisement
Related Words
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse