Droid (font)
WiktionaryText

Etymology


From android via apocope. Originally spelled with an apostrophe, as ’droid.

Noun


  1. An intelligent robot in the Star Wars universe.
  2. Abbreviation of android; an intelligent robot, usually made with some physical resemblance to a human.
    • 2005, John L. Kundert-Gibbs, Dariush Derakhshani, Maya Secrets of the Pros, p. 96:
      For a quick venture into ambient occlusion, we'll render a CGI robot droid in several passes and composite them back together in Photoshop to show the flexibility of ambient occlusion as well as rendering in layers for different lighting passes.
    • 1995, J. D. Robb, Glory in Death, p. 39:
      The bartender was a droid, as most were, but she doubted this one had been programmed to listen cheerfully to customers' hard luck stories.
    • 1985, R. A. Montgomery, War with the Evil Power Master, p. 92:
      The droid nods in agreement and begins to arm the ship's defensive weapons.
    • 1981, Paul Friedman, Computer programs in BASIC, p. 37:
      Each droid can move one square at a time. The computer and you each "own" a droid, but each of you can control the other's droid if you so desire.


Etymology


From android via apocope. Originally spelled with an apostrophe, as ’droid.

Noun


  1. An intelligent robot in the Star Wars universe.
  2. Abbreviation of android; an intelligent robot, usually made with some physical resemblance to a human.
    • 2005, John L. Kundert-Gibbs, Dariush Derakhshani, Maya Secrets of the Pros, p. 96:
      For a quick venture into ambient occlusion, we'll render a CGI robot droid in several passes and composite them back together in Photoshop to show the flexibility of ambient occlusion as well as rendering in layers for different lighting passes.
    • 1995, J. D. Robb, Glory in Death, p. 39:
      The bartender was a droid, as most were, but she doubted this one had been programmed to listen cheerfully to customers' hard luck stories.
    • 1985, R. A. Montgomery, War with the Evil Power Master, p. 92:
      The droid nods in agreement and begins to arm the ship's defensive weapons.
    • 1981, Paul Friedman, Computer programs in BASIC, p. 37:
      Each droid can move one square at a time. The computer and you each "own" a droid, but each of you can control the other's droid if you so desire.


Etymology


From android via apocope. Originally spelled with an apostrophe, as ’droid.

Noun


  1. An intelligent robot in the Star Wars universe.
  2. Abbreviation of android; an intelligent robot, usually made with some physical resemblance to a human.
    • 2005, John L. Kundert-Gibbs, Dariush Derakhshani, Maya Secrets of the Pros, p. 96:
      For a quick venture into ambient occlusion, we'll render a CGI robot droid in several passes and composite them back together in Photoshop to show the flexibility of ambient occlusion as well as rendering in layers for different lighting passes.
    • 1995, J. D. Robb, Glory in Death, p. 39:
      The bartender was a droid, as most were, but she doubted this one had been programmed to listen cheerfully to customers' hard luck stories.
    • 1985, R. A. Montgomery, War with the Evil Power Master, p. 92:
      The droid nods in agreement and begins to arm the ship's defensive weapons.
    • 1981, Paul Friedman, Computer programs in BASIC, p. 37:
      Each droid can move one square at a time. The computer and you each "own" a droid, but each of you can control the other's droid if you so desire.


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