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Model   /mˈɑdəl/   Listen
Model

noun
1.
A hypothetical description of a complex entity or process.  Synonyms: framework, theoretical account.
2.
A type of product.
3.
A person who poses for a photographer or painter or sculptor.  Synonym: poser.
4.
Representation of something (sometimes on a smaller scale).  Synonym: simulation.
5.
Something to be imitated.  Synonyms: example, exemplar, good example.  "A model of clarity" , "He is the very model of a modern major general"
6.
Someone worthy of imitation.  Synonym: role model.
7.
A representative form or pattern.  Synonym: example.
8.
A woman who wears clothes to display fashions.  Synonyms: fashion model, manakin, manikin, mannequin, mannikin.
9.
The act of representing something (usually on a smaller scale).  Synonyms: modeling, modelling.
verb
(past & past part. modeled or modelled; pres. part. modeling or modelling)
1.
Plan or create according to a model or models.  Synonym: pattern.
2.
Form in clay, wax, etc.  Synonyms: mold, mould.
3.
Assume a posture as for artistic purposes.  Synonyms: pose, posture, sit.
4.
Display (clothes) as a mannequin.
5.
Create a representation or model of.  Synonym: simulate.
6.
Construct a model of.  Synonym: mock up.
adjective
1.
Worthy of imitation.  Synonym: exemplary.  "Model citizens"



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"Model" Quotes from Famous Books



... Italy, and all the lands overrun by the Teutonic nations were still judged by their own laws, so that this was a very useful work; and it was so well done that the conquerors took them up in time, and the Roman law was the great model studied everywhere by those who wished to understand the rules of jurisprudence, that is, of law and justice. Thus in another way Rome ...
— Young Folks' History of Rome • Charlotte Mary Yonge

... show off in. Now these same clothes formed the basis of her system. By day she was always in tailored frocks of the strictest simplicity. They were linen, or silk, or wool, made after the same model. Slim, tight skirt; slim, fitted coat; sailor hat, and strange boots, which she had made to order after her own design. They were like short riding boots, pulled on and crumpled over the instep like a glove. She ...
— The Cricket • Marjorie Cooke

... is the practice to feed them with nuts, cakes, apples, etc., according to the liberality and humour of the visitor. The usage is very ancient, and has some connexion with a tradition that has given its name to the canton. A bear is also the arms of the state. One of these animals is a model of grace, waddling about on his hind legs like an alderman in a ball-room. You may imagine that P—— was excessively delighted at the sight of these old friends. The Bernese have an engraving of the graceful ...
— A Residence in France - With An Excursion Up The Rhine, And A Second Visit To Switzerland • J. Fenimore Cooper

... the German was King of Germany, Hrabanus Maurus Archbishop of Mayence; and the spirit of Charlemagne, Alcuin, and Eginhard was revived at Aachen, Fulda, and many other places, such as St. Gall, Weissenburg, and Corvey, where schools were founded on the model of that of Tours. The translation of the "Harmony of the Gospels," gives us a specimen of the quiet studies of those monasteries, whereas the lay on the victory of Louis III. over the Normans, in 881, reminds us of the dangers that threatened Germany from the West at the same time that the Hungarians ...
— Chips From A German Workshop. Vol. III. • F. Max Mueller

... given her, by some rare privilege, extreme purity of form combined with strength of countenance. The nobility of her life was manifest in the general expression of her person, which might have served as a model for a type of trustfulness, or of modesty. Her health, though brilliant, was not coarsely apparent; in fact, her whole air was distinguished. Beneath the little gloves of a light color it was easy to imagine her pretty hands. The ...
— Ursula • Honore de Balzac


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