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noun

  1. See under post2(def 7).

noun

  1. a position of duty, employment, or trust to which one is assigned or appointed: a diplomatic post.
  2. the station or rounds of a person on duty, as a soldier, sentry or nurse.
  3. a military station with permanent buildings.
  4. a local unit of a veterans’ organization.
  5. trading post.
  6. a place in the stock exchange where a particular stock is traded.
  7. (in the British military services) either of two bugle calls (first post and last post) giving notice of the time to retire for the night, similar in purpose to the U.S. taps.
  8. the body of troops occupying a military station.

verb (used with object)

  1. to place or station at a post.
  2. to provide or put up, as bail.
  3. to appoint to a post of command.

noun (in the British military services)

  1. a bugle call that orders men to retire for sleep
  2. a similar call sounded at military funerals

noun

  1. a length of wood, metal, etc, fixed upright in the ground to serve as a support, marker, point of attachment, etc
  2. horse racing
    1. either of two upright poles marking the beginning (starting post) and end (winning post) of a racecourse
    2. the finish of a horse race
  3. any of the main upright supports of a piece of furniture, such as a four-poster bed

verb (tr)

  1. (sometimes foll by up) to fasten or put up (a notice) in a public place
  2. to announce by means of or as if by means of a posterto post banns
  3. to publish (a name) on a list

noun

  1. a position to which a person is appointed or elected; appointment; job
  2. a position or station to which a person, such as a sentry, is assigned for duty
  3. a permanent military establishment
  4. British either of two military bugle calls (first post and last post) ordering or giving notice of the time to retire for the night
  5. See trading post (def. 1), trading post (def. 2)

verb

  1. (tr) to assign to or station at a particular place or position
  2. mainly British to transfer to a different unit or ship on taking up a new appointment, etc

noun

  1. mainly British letters, packages, etc, that are transported and delivered by the Post Office; mail
  2. mainly British a single collection or delivery of mail
  3. British an official system of mail delivery
  4. an item of electronic mail made publicly available
  5. (formerly) any of a series of stations furnishing relays of men and horses to deliver mail over a fixed route
  6. a rider who carried mail between such stations
  7. British another word for pillar box
  8. British short for post office
  9. a size of writing or printing paper, 15 1/4 by 19 inches or 16 1/2 by 21 inches (large post)
  10. any of various book sizes, esp 5 1/4 by 8 1/4 inches (post octavo) and 8 1/4 by 10 1/4 inches (post quarto)
  11. by return of post British by the next mail in the opposite direction

verb

  1. (tr) mainly British to send by postUS and Canadian word: mail
  2. (tr) to make (electronic mail) publicly available
  3. (tr) accounting
    1. to enter (an item) in a ledger
    2. (often foll by up)to compile or enter all paper items in (a ledger)
  4. (tr) to inform of the latest news (esp in the phrase keep someone posted)
  5. (intr) (of a rider) to rise from and reseat oneself in a saddle in time with the motions of a trotting horse; perform a rising trot
  6. (intr) (formerly) to travel with relays of post horses
  7. archaic to travel or dispatch with speed; hasten

adverb

  1. with speed; rapidly
  2. by means of post horses

abbreviation for

  1. point of sales terminal

n.1“a timber set upright,” from Old English post “pillar, doorpost,” and Old French post “post, upright beam,” both from Latin postis “door, post, doorpost,” perhaps from por- “forth” (see pro-) + stare “to stand” (see stet). Similar compound in Sanskrit prstham “back, roof, peak,” Avestan parshti “back,” Greek pastas “porch in front of a house, colonnade,” Middle High German virst “ridepole,” Lithuanian pirstas, Old Church Slavonic pristu “finger” (PIE *por-st-i-). n.2“place when on duty,” 1590s, from Middle French poste “place where one is stationed,” also, “station for post horses” (16c.), from Italian posto “post, station,” from Vulgar Latin *postum, from Latin positum, neuter past participle of ponere “to place, to put” (see position (n.)). Earliest sense in English was military; meaning “job, position” is attested 1690s. n.3“mail system,” c.1500, “riders and horses posted at intervals,” from post (n.2) on notion of riders and horses “posted” at intervals along a route to speed mail in relays, probably formed on model of Middle French poste in this sense (late 15c.). Meaning “system for carrying mail” is from 1660s. v.4“to put up bail money,” 1781, from one of the nouns post, but which one is uncertain. Related: Posted; posting. v.1“to affix (a paper, etc.) to a post” (in a public place), hence, “to make known,” 1630s, from post (n.1). Related: Posted; posting. v.2in bookkeeping, “to transfer from a day book to a formal account,” 1620s, from post (n.2) via a figurative sense of “carrying” by post horses. Related: Posted; posting. v.3“to send through the postal system,” 1837, from post (n.3). Earlier, “to travel with relays of horses” (1530s). Related: Posted; posting. v.5“to station at a post,” from post (n.2). Related: Posted; posting. adv.1540s, “with post horses,” hence, “rapidly;” especially in the phrase to ride post “go rapidly,” from post (n.3). see deaf as a post; from pillar to post; keep posted.

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