Mirror
1Mirror — Mir ror, n. [OE. mirour, F. miroir, OF. also mireor, fr. (assumed) LL. miratorium, fr. mirare to look at, L. mirari to wonder. See {Marvel}, and cf. {Miracle}, {Mirador}.] [1913 Webster] 1. A looking glass or a speculum; any glass or polished… …
2Mirror go — is a type of elementary Go opening strategy. It refers to all go openings in which one player plays moves that are diagonally opposite those of this opponent, making positions that have a rotational symmetry through 180° about the central 10 10… …
3Mirror — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Para otros usos de este término, véase Mirrors. Mirror es un término usado en Internet para referirse a un servidor FTP, página WEB o cualquier otro recurso que es espejo de otro, es decir, tiene una copia de la… …
4Mirror — Mir ror, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Mirrored}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Mirroring}.] 1. To reflect, as in a mirror. [1913 Webster] 2. To copy or duplicate; to mimic or imitate; as, the files at Project Gutenberg were mirrored on several other ftp sites around… …
5Mirror — Mirror, The a British daily ↑tabloid newspaper owned by Mirror Group Newspapers. It usually supports the Labour Party …
6mirror — [n] glass that reflects image cheval glass, gaper, hand glass, imager, looking glass, pier glass, polished metal, reflector, seeing glass, speculum; concepts 443,470 mirror [v] copy, reflect act like, depict, double, echo, embody, emulate,… …
7mirror — [mir′ər] n. [ME mirour < OFr mireor < VL * miratorium < mirare: see MIRAGE] 1. a smooth surface that reflects the images of objects; esp., a piece of glass coated on the reverse side as with silver or an amalgam 2. anything that gives a… …
8mirror — index copy, impersonate, mock (imitate), reproduce Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
9mirror — n *model, example, pattern, exemplar, ideal, standard, beau ideal …
10mirror — ► NOUN 1) a surface, typically of glass coated with a metal amalgam, which reflects a clear image. 2) something accurately representing something else. ► VERB 1) show a reflection of. 2) correspond to. ORIGIN Old French mirour, from Latin mirare… …