post
Multiple Entries:
post post-
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
post1
▶noun
- 1 a long, sturdy piece of timber or metal set upright in the ground and used as a support or a marker.
■ (the post) a starting post or winning post.
- 2 an Internet posting.
- 1 display (a notice) in a public place.
- 2 announce or publish.
■ publish the name of (a member of the armed forces) as missing or dead.
■ send (a message) to an Internet bulletin board or newsgroup, or display (information) online.
- 3 achieve or record (a particular score or result).
- 4 (post up) Basketball play in a position near the basket, along the side of the key.
– origin OE, from L. postis ‘doorpost’, later ‘rod, beam’.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
post2
▶noun
- 1 chiefly Brit. the official service or system that delivers letters and parcels.
■ letters and parcels delivered.
■ a single collection or delivery of post.
- 2 historical each of a series of couriers who carried mail on horseback between fixed stages.
- 1 chiefly Brit. send via the postal system.
- 2 (in bookkeeping) enter (an item) in a ledger.
- 3 historical travel with relays of horses.
■ archaic travel with haste; hurry.
– phrases
keep someone posted keep someone informed of the latest developments or news.
keep someone posted keep someone informed of the latest developments or news.
– origin C16: from Fr. poste, from Ital. posta, from a contr. of L. posita, fem. past part. of ponere ‘to place’.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
post3
▶noun
- 1 a job.
- 2 a place where someone is on duty or where an activity is carried out.
■ N. Amer. a force stationed at a permanent position or camp.
- 3 historical the status or rank of full-grade captain in the Royal Navy.
■ station in a particular place.
– origin C16: from Fr. poste, from Ital. posto, from a contr. of pop. L. positum, neut. past part. of ponere ‘to place’.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
post-/pəʊst/
▶prefix after in time or order: post-date.
– origin from L. post ‘after, behind’.
'post' also found in these Oxford entries:
accredit
- ante-post
- appointive
- autopsy
- baby blue
- Belisha beacon
- BFPO
- bollard
- bolster
- box
- bulletin board
- ceremonial
- chaise
- con
- confirm
- correspondence course
- cross
- cross-post
- distance
- drop
- endow
- enfilade
- ex post
- ex post facto
- fill
- fingerpost
- first
- first post
- fly-post
- four-poster
- fulcrum
- gatepost
- gazette
- gibbet
- giro
- GPO
- hatstand
- incumbent
- induct
- induction
- jamb
- Jiffy bag
- junk mail
- king post
- lamp post
- last post
- lectureship
- leet
- letter
- listening post

