random









random


adjective

  1. proceeding, made, or occurring without definite aim, reason, or pattern: the random selection of numbers.
  2. Statistics. of or characterizing a process of selection in which each item of a set has an equal probability of being chosen.
  3. Building Trades.
    1. (of building materials) lacking uniformity of dimensions: random shingles.
    2. (of ashlar) laid without continuous courses.
    3. constructed or applied without regularity: random bond.
  4. Slang.
    1. unknown, unidentified, or suspiciously out of place: A couple of random guys showed up at the party.
    2. odd or unpredictable, often in an amusing way: my totally random life.

noun

  1. something that is random, or a random state or condition: different statistical methods used to estimate randoms.
  2. Slang.
    1. a person or thing that is unknown, unidentified, or suspiciously out of place.
    2. a person or thing that is odd or unpredictable.
  3. Chiefly British. bank3(def 7b).

adverb

  1. Building Trades. without uniformity: random-sized slates.
Idioms
  1. at random, without definite aim, purpose, method, or adherence to a prior arrangement; in a haphazard way: Contestants were chosen at random from the studio audience.

adjective

  1. lacking any definite plan or prearranged order; haphazarda random selection
  2. statistics
    1. having a value which cannot be determined but only described probabilisticallya random variable
    2. chosen without regard to any characteristics of the individual members of the population so that each has an equal chance of being selectedrandom sampling
  3. informal (of a person) unknownsome random guy waiting for a bus

noun

  1. at random in a purposeless fashion; not following any prearranged order
adj.

“having no definite aim or purpose,” 1650s, from at random (1560s), “at great speed” (thus, “carelessly, haphazardly”), alteration of Middle English noun randon “impetuosity, speed” (c.1300), from Old French randon “rush, disorder, force, impetuosity,” from randir “to run fast,” from Frankish *rant “a running” or some other Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *randa (cf. Old High German rennen “to run,” Old English rinnan “to flow, to run;” see run (v.)).

In 1980s U.S. college student slang it began to acquire a sense of “inferior, undesirable.” (A 1980 William Safire column describes it as a college slang noun meaning “person who does not belong on our dormitory floor.”) Random access in reference to computer memory is recorded from 1953. Related: Randomly; randomness.

  1. Relating to a type of circumstance or event that is described by a probability distribution.
  2. Relating to an event in which all outcomes are equally likely, as in the testing of a blood sample for the presence of a substance.

see at random.

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