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Definition of Machine-accessible
1. Adjective. Stored in, controlled by, or in direct communication with a central computer.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Machine-accessible
Literary usage of Machine-accessible
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Ontario Law Reports: Cases Determined in the Court of Appeal and in the by Ontario High Court of Justice, Ontario Court of Appeal, Law Society of Upper Canada (1906)
"The action was for damages for injuries sustained from using a nickle-in-the-slot
electric machine accessible to the public. The plaintiff had proved the ..."
2. Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers by American Institute of Electrical Engineers (1903)
"... exchanges up to 100 subscribers and employing the so-called direct connection,
requiring a single machine accessible periodically to all subscribers. ..."
3. Elementary and Dental Radiography by Howard Riley Raper (1918)
"... own radiographie work is that it is so much more convenient, for pulp canal
work, to have the machine accessible and in the same office at all times. ..."
4. Medical Record by George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman (1897)
"No hospital or surgeon's office is really up-to-date without a good X-RAY MACHINE
accessible to its operating room. The resulting benefit is too great to ..."
5. Signposts in Cyberspace: The Domain Name System And Internet Navigation by National Research Council (U.S.) (2005)
"In their vision, the Semantic Web would enable Web agents to draw upon that
network of machine-accessible knowledge to carry out complex functions with less ..."
6. Watershed: The Role of Fresh Water in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflictby Stephen C. Lonergan, David B. Brooks by Stephen C. Lonergan, David B. Brooks (1994)
"... including the preparation of a machine-accessible database on alternative
supply technologies (IWEC 1993) and the design of a pilot program of rooftop ..."
7. Refrigerating Machinery: Its Principles and Management. With Sixty-four by Alexander Ritchie Leask (1895)
"... which renders them very convenient of access, the design being such as to
render all parts of the machine accessible, a most important element. ..."