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Definition of Median
1. Adjective. Relating to or constituting the middle value of an ordered set of values (or the average of the middle two in a set with an even number of values). "The median income for the year was $15,000"
2. Noun. The value below which 50% of the cases fall.
3. Adjective. Dividing an animal into right and left halves.
4. Adjective. Relating to or situated in or extending toward the middle.
Definition of Median
1. a. Being in the middle; running through the middle; as, a median groove.
2. n. A median line or point.
Definition of Median
1. Adjective. Relating to Media or Medes. ¹
2. Adjective. (obsolete) Of laws, rules etc.: unchanging, invariable. ¹
3. Noun. a Mede ¹
4. Noun. The northwestern Iranian language of the Medes, attested only by numerous loanwords in Old Persian, few borrowings in Old Armenian and some glosses in Ancient Greek; nothing is known of its grammar. ¹
5. Noun. (context: anatomy now rare) A central vein or nerve, especially the median vein or median nerve running through the forearm and arm. (defdate from 15th c.) ¹
6. Noun. (statistics) The quantity or value at the midpoint of a set of values, such that the variable is equally likely to fall above or below it; the middle value of a discrete series arranged in magnitude (or the mean of the middle two terms when there is an even number of terms). (defdate from 19th c.) ¹
7. Noun. (American English) The median strip; the area separating two lanes of opposite-direction traffic. (defdate from 20th c.) ¹
8. Adjective. Situated in the middle; central, intermediate. (defdate from 16th c.) ¹
9. Adjective. (anatomy botany) In the middle of an organ, structure etc.; towards the median plane of an organ or limb. (defdate from 16th c.) ¹
10. Adjective. (statistics) Having the median as its value. (defdate from 19th c.) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Median
1. a central part [n -S]
Medical Definition of Median
1.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Median
Literary usage of Median
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the English Language by William Dwight Whitney (1890)
"Median cephalic vein, the rein of the arm which connects the median and the cephalic
... Median coverts, in ornith., those coverts of the secondaries which ..."
2. The Psychology of Childhood by Naomi Norsworthy, Mary Theodora Whitley (1918)
"In exercise i above there are 25 cases Counting in till the i3th case is reached,
we see his score is C ; therefore the median score is C. If we have an ..."
3. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1878)
"The first supposition is rendered improbable by the fact that the divided median
nerve was of normal thickness. The second assumption has more in its favour ..."
4. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and General (1890)
"At the upper part of the floor of the 4th ventricle a longitudinal tract of nerve
fibres, the fasciculus teres, ascends on each side of its median furrow ..."
5. The Journal of Educational Research by American Educational Research Association (1922)
"The median, however, is an average which may be applied to written compositions in
... The reader will recall that the median is the middle item of a series ..."
6. Psychological Review by American Psychological Association (1895)
"PRACTICAL COMPUTATION OF THE Median. BY EW SCRIPTURE, Yale University. In the
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW for Jan., 1894, I called attention to the practical and ..."
7. Anatomy, descriptive and surgical by Henry Gray (1864)
"The Median NEUVE (fig. 288) has received its name from the course it takes along
the middle ... No branches are given off from the median nerve in the arm. ..."