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Signal   /sˈɪgnəl/   Listen
Signal

noun
1.
Any nonverbal action or gesture that encodes a message.  Synonyms: sign, signaling.
2.
Any incitement to action.  "The victory was a signal for wild celebration"
3.
An electric quantity (voltage or current or field strength) whose modulation represents coded information about the source from which it comes.
verb
(past & past part. signaled or signalled; pres. part. signaling or signalling)
1.
Communicate silently and non-verbally by signals or signs.  Synonyms: sign, signalise, signalize.  "The diner signaled the waiters to bring the menu"
2.
Be a signal for or a symptom of.  Synonyms: bespeak, betoken, indicate, point.  "Her behavior points to a severe neurosis" , "The economic indicators signal that the euro is undervalued"
adjective
1.
Notably out of the ordinary.



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"Signal" Quotes from Famous Books



... last number on the program, she was not surprised to find the audience standing about in groups, or picturesquely posed on divans, and her appearance was the signal for a new ...
— Patty Blossom • Carolyn Wells

... the mound; but I stood near him: and there followed a chosen band of illustrious youths in readiness to restrain with their hands thy daughter's struggles; then the son of Achilles took a full-crowned goblet of entire gold, and poured forth libations to his deceased father; and makes signal to me to proclaim silence through all the Grecian host. And I standing forth in the midst, thus spoke: "Be silent, O ye Greeks, let all the people remain silent; silence, be still:" and I made the people perfectly still. But ...
— The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. • Euripides

... assembled to commemorate that ever memorable Fourth of July, 1776, when our forefathers, inspired with the love of liberty, dared to divest themselves of the shackles of tyranny and oppression: yes, my friends, on that important day these stripes were hoisted on the standard of liberty, as a signal of unity, and of their determination to fight under them, until America was numbered among the nations of the globe, as one of them, a free and independent nation. Yes, my countrymen, she was determined to spare neither blood nor treasure, until she had accomplished ...
— A Journal of a Young Man of Massachusetts, 2nd ed. • Benjamin Waterhouse

... constructed is commonly mingled with a great deal of organic waste, which serves to promote its fertility. On these accounts alluvial grounds, though they vary considerably in fertility, commonly afford the most fruitful fields of any region. They have, moreover, the signal advantage that they often may be refreshed by allowing the flood waters to visit them, an action which but for the interference of man commonly takes place once each year. Thus in the valley of the Nile ...
— Outlines of the Earth's History - A Popular Study in Physiography • Nathaniel Southgate Shaler

... king, and no less charmed with the homage of his fellow-citizens. "What lacks he then?" Nothing but an economy of good parts. By aiming at too much, he has spoiled all, and neutralised what might have been an estimable character, distinguished by signal services to mankind. A man must take his choice not only between virtue and vice, but between different virtues. Otherwise, he will not gain his own approbation, or secure the respect of others. The graces and accomplishments of private life mar the man of business and the statesman. There ...
— The Spirit of the Age - Contemporary Portraits • William Hazlitt


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