searchable


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search

(sûrch)
v. searched, search·ing, search·es
v. tr.
1. To move around in, go through, or look through in an effort to find something: searched the room for her missing earring; searched the desk for a pen.
2. To make a careful examination or investigation of; probe: search one's conscience for the right thing to do.
3. To seek data matching a word, phrase, or pattern of characters in: searched the internet for information about ostriches.
4. Law To examine (a person or property) for the purpose of discovering evidence of a crime.
v. intr.
1. To search a place or space in order to find something: searched all afternoon for my wallet.
2. To make a careful examination or investigation: searching for the right words to say.
3. To use a search engine or other software to find any data matching a particular pattern.
4. Law To make a search for evidence.
n.
1. An act of searching.
2. Law The examination of a person or property, as by a law enforcement officer, for the purpose of discovering evidence of a crime.
3. A control mechanism on an audio or video player that rapidly advances or reverses the playing of a recording.
Phrasal Verb:
search out
To seek to find or come to know by examination: sought out the answer in a history book.
Idiom:
search me Slang
Used by a speaker to indicate that he or she does not have an answer to a question just asked.

[Middle English serchen, from Anglo-Norman sercher, variant of Old French cerchier, from Latin circāre, to go around, from Latin circus, circle, from Greek krikos, kirkos; see sker-2 in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.]

search′a·ble adj.
search′er n.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Translations
References in periodicals archive ?
Originally established in 1998 through an effort led by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, ICHEIC had already made available a searchable database of nearly 59,000 policyholders from 15 countries, most of them compiled through public records.
EPA launched a pilot website that provides the public and industry with searchable, facility-level enforcement and compliance information.
The result is the Construction Waste Management Database Web site that contains a searchable database of almost 2000 construction waste recyclers nationwide.
The new Web Publisher makes publishing large amounts of searchable information on the Internet fast and easy.
Subscribers have access to: five year's worth of searchable archives of the Private Equity Analyst newsletter; a market research center that updates investors with fundraising activity; spotlights on institutions, firms and the companies in which they invest; trend information; and a daily news feed.
The searchable database program soon will be available for download onto personal computers as well.
The expanded Journal is a terrific feature, consisting of a searchable database of current events, illustrated with AP photos.
The site includes a searchable database with information on the size, circumference, height, and location of the nation's 884 biggest trees.
The specs are now searchable! If you're looking for, say, a 250-ton, toggle-clamp injection press with a 5-oz shot and all-electric drive, the search engine will show you all the machine models available in the U.S.
In the meantime, the Campaign for Equality has set up a searchable database of petition names on its Web site (www.massequality.org) so voters can check to see if their signatures were misdirected.
In addition to providing a searchable platform for both buyers and sellers, periodic email updates will be sent to registrants to alert them when potential business partners register or make inquiries matching their criteria.