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English Dictionary: Forth by the DICT Development Group
5 results for Forth
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
forth
adv
  1. from a particular thing or place or position (`forth' is obsolete); "ran away from the lion"; "wanted to get away from there"; "sent the children away to boarding school"; "the teacher waved the children away from the dead animal"; "went off to school"; "they drove off"; "go forth and preach"
    Synonym(s): away, off, forth
  2. forward in time or order or degree; "from that time forth"; "from the sixth century onward"
    Synonym(s): forth, forward, onward
  3. out into view; "came forth from the crowd"; "put my ideas forth"
n
  1. a river in southern Scotland that flows eastward to the Firth of Forth
    Synonym(s): Forth, Forth River
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Forth \Forth\, v.[AS. for[edh], fr. for akin to D. voort, G.
      fort [root]78. See {Fore}, {For}, and cf. {Afford},
      {Further}, adv.]
      1. Forward; onward in time, place, or order; in advance from
            a given point; on to end; as, from that day forth; one,
            two, three, and so forth.
  
                     Lucas was Paul's companion, at the leastway from the
                     sixteenth of the Acts forth.               --Tyndale.
  
                     From this time forth, I never will speak word.
                                                                              --Shak.
  
                     I repeated the Ave Maria; the inquisitor bad me say
                     forth; I said I was taught no more.   --Strype.
  
      2. Out, as from a state of concealment, retirement,
            confinement, nondevelopment, or the like; out into notice
            or view; as, the plants in spring put forth leaves.
  
                     When winter past, and summer scarce begun, Invites
                     them forth to labor in the sun.         --Dryden.
  
      3. Beyond a (certain) boundary; away; abroad; out.
  
                     I have no mind of feasting forth to-night. --Shak.
  
      4. Throughly; from beginning to end. [Obs.] --Shak.
  
      {And so forth}, {Back and forth}, {From forth}. See under
            {And}, {Back}, and {From}.
  
      {Forth of}, {Forth from}, out of. [Obs.] --Shak.
  
      {To bring forth}. See under {Bring}.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Forth \Forth\, prep.
      Forth from; out of. [Archaic]
  
               Some forth their cabins peep.                  --Donne.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Forth \Forth\, n. [OE., a ford. [?] 78. See {Frith}.]
      A way; a passage or ford. [Obs.] --Todd.

From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (15Feb98) [foldoc]:
   FORTH
  
      1. An interactive extensible language using
      {postfix syntax} and a data stack, developed by Charles
      H. Moore in the 1960s.   FORTH is highly user-configurable and
      there are many different implementations, the following
      description is of a typical default configuration.
  
      Forth programs are structured as lists of "words" - FORTH's
      term which encompasses language keywords, primitives and
      user-defined {subroutines}.   Forth takes the idea of
      subroutines to an extreme - nearly everything is a subroutine.
      A word is any string of characters except the separator which
      defaults to space.   Numbers are treated specially.   Words are
      read one at a time from the input stream and either executed
      immediately ("interpretive execution") or compiled as part of
      the definition of a new word.
  
      The sequential nature of list execution and the implicit use
      of the data stack (numbers appearing in the lists are pushed
      to the stack as they are encountered) imply postfix syntax.
      Although postfix notation is initially difficult, experienced
      users find it simple and efficient.
  
      Words appearing in executable lists may be "{primitives}"
      (simple {assembly language} operations), names of previously
      compiled procedures or other special words.   A procedure
      definition is introduced by ":" and ended with ";" and is
      compiled as it is read.
  
      Most Forth dialects include the source language structures
      BEGIN-AGAIN, BEGIN-WHILE-REPEAT, BEGIN-UNTIL, DO-LOOP, and
      IF-ELSE-THEN, and others can be added by the user.   These are
      "compiling structures" which may only occur in a procedure
      definition.
  
      FORTH can include in-line {assembly language} between "CODE"
      and "ENDCODE" or similar constructs.   Forth primitives are
      written entirely in {assembly language}, secondaries contain a
      mixture.   In fact code in-lining is the basis of compilation
      in some implementations.
  
      Once assembled, primitives are used exactly like other words.
      A significant difference in behaviour can arise, however, from
      the fact that primitives end with a jump to "NEXT", the entry
      point of some code called the sequencer, whereas
      non-primitives end with the address of the "EXIT" primitive.
      The EXIT code includes the scheduler in some {multi-tasking}
      systems so a process can be {deschedule}d after executing a
      non-primitive, but not after a primitive.
  
      Forth implementations differ widely.   Implementation
      techniques include {threaded code}, dedicated Forth
      processors, {macros} at various levels, or interpreters
      written in another language such as {C}.   Some implementations
      provide {real-time} response, user-defined data structures,
      {multitasking}, {floating-point} arithmetic, and/or {virtual
      memory}.
  
      Some Forth systems support virtual memory without specific
      hardware support like {MMU}s.   However, Forth virtual memory
      is usually only a sort of extended data space and does not
      usually support executable code.
  
      FORTH does not distinguish between {operating system} calls
      and the language.   Commands relating to I/O, {file systems}
      and {virtual memory} are part of the same language as the
      words for arithmetic, memory access, loops, IF statements, and
      the user's application.
  
      Many Forth systems provide user-declared "vocabularies" which
      allow the same word to have different meanings in different
      contexts.   Within one vocabulary, re-defining a word causes
      the previous definition to be hidden from the interpreter (and
      therefore the compiler), but not from previous definitions.
  
      FORTH was first used to guide the telescope at NRAO, Kitt
      Peak.   Moore considered it to be a {fourth-generation
      language} but his {operating system} wouldn't let him use six
      letters in a program name, so FOURTH became FORTH.
  
      Versions include fig-FORTH, FORTH 79 and FORTH 83.
  
      {FAQs
      (http://www.complang.tuwien.ac.at/forth/faq/faq-general-2.html)}.
      {ANS Forth standard, dpANS6
      (http://www.taygeta.com/forth/dpans.html)}.
  
      FORTH Interest Group, Box 1105, San Carlos CA 94070.
  
      See also {51forth}, {F68K}, {cforth}, {E-Forth}, {FORML},
      {TILE Forth}.
  
      [Leo Brodie, "Starting Forth"].
  
      [Leo Brodie, "Thinking Forth"].
  
      [Jack Woehr, "Forth, the New Model"].
  
      [R.G. Loeliger, "Threaded Interpretive Languages"].
  
      2. {FOundation for Research and Technology - Hellas}.
  
      (1997-04-16)
  
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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