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English Dictionary: comment by the DICT Development Group
5 results for comment
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
comment
n
  1. a statement that expresses a personal opinion or belief or adds information; "from time to time she contributed a personal comment on his account"
    Synonym(s): remark, comment, input
  2. a written explanation or criticism or illustration that is added to a book or other textual material; "he wrote an extended comment on the proposal"
    Synonym(s): comment, commentary
  3. a report (often malicious) about the behavior of other people; "the divorce caused much gossip"
    Synonym(s): gossip, comment, scuttlebutt
v
  1. make or write a comment on; "he commented the paper of his colleague"
    Synonym(s): comment, notice, remark, point out
  2. explain or interpret something
  3. provide interlinear explanations for words or phrases; "He annotated on what his teacher had written"
    Synonym(s): gloss, comment, annotate
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Comment \Com"ment\, v. t.
      To comment on. [Archaic.] --Fuller.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Comment \Com"ment\, n. [Cf. OF. comment.]
      1. A remark, observation, or criticism; gossip; discourse;
            talk.
  
                     Their lavish comment when her name was named.
                                                                              --Tennyson.
  
      2. A note or observation intended to explain, illustrate, or
            criticise the meaning of a writing, book, etc.;
            explanation; annotation; exposition.
  
                     All the volumes of philosophy, With all their
                     comments.                                          --Prior.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Comment \Com"ment\ (?; 277), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Commented}; p.
      pr. & vb. n. {Commenting}.] [F. commenter, L. commentari to
      meditate upon, explain, v. intens. of comminisci, commentus,
      to reflect upon, invent; com- + the root of meminisse to
      remember, mens mind. See {Mind}.]
      To make remarks, observations, or criticism; especially, to
      write notes on the works of an author, with a view to
      illustrate his meaning, or to explain particular passages; to
      write annotations; -- often followed by on or upon.
  
               A physician to comment on your malady.   --Shak.
  
               Critics . . . proceed to comment on him. --Dryden.
  
               I must translate and comment.                  --Pope.

From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (15Feb98) [foldoc]:
   comment
  
      (Or "remark") Explanatory text embedded in
      program {source} (or less often data) intended to help human
      readers understand it.
  
      Code completely without comments is often hard to read, but
      too heavily commented code isn't much better, especially if
      the comments are not kept up-to-date with changes to the code.
      Too much commenting may mean that the code is
      over-complicated.   A good rule is to comment everything that
      needs it but write code that doesn't need much of it.
  
      A particularly irksome form of over-commenting explains
      exactly what each statement does, even when it is obvious to
      any reasonably competant programmer, e.g.
  
      /* Open the input file */
      infd = open(input_file, O_RDONLY);
  
      (1998-04-28)
  
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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