resident
See also: résident
English
Etymology
From Middle English, from Anglo-Norman, from Latin residēns, present participle of resideō (“to remain behind, reside, dwell”), from re- (“back”) + sedeō (“I sit”). Doublet of resiant.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɹɛzɪd(ə)nt/
Noun
resident (plural residents)
- A person, animal or plant living at a certain location or in a certain area.
- 1898, Winston Churchill, chapter 4, in The Celebrity:
- Mr. Cooke at once began a tirade against the residents of Asquith for permitting a sandy and generally disgraceful condition of the roads. So roundly did he vituperate the inn management in particular, and with such a loud flow of words, that I trembled lest he should be heard on the veranda.
- The tiger lily is a resident of Asia.
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- A bird which does not migrate during the course of the year.
- A graduated medical student who is receiving advanced training in a specialty.
- She's a resident in neurosurgery at Mass General.
- A diplomatic representative who resides at a foreign court, usually of inferior rank to an ambassador.
- (law) a legal permanent resident, someone who maintains residency.
Derived terms
Translations
person living at a location or an area
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graduate medical student receiving medical training
Adjective
resident (comparative more resident, superlative most resident)
- Dwelling, or having an abode, in a place for a continued length of time; residing on one's own estate.
- resident in the city or in the country
- Based in a particular place; on hand; local.
- He is our resident computer expert.
- (obsolete) Fixed; stable; certain.
- Jeremy Taylor
- stable and resident like a rock
- Davenant
- one there still resident as day and night
- Jeremy Taylor
- (computing, of memory) Currently loaded into RAM; contrasted with virtual memory.
Related terms
▼ <a href='/wiki/Category:English_terms_derived_from_the_PIE_root_*sed-' title='Category:English terms derived from the PIE root *sed-'>English terms derived from the PIE root *sed-</a> (0 c, 29 e)
<a href='/wiki/assess' title='assess'>assess</a>
<a href='/wiki/assiduous' title='assiduous'>assiduous</a>
<a href='/wiki/besiege' title='besiege'>besiege</a>
<a href='/wiki/coresident' title='coresident'>coresident</a>
<a href='/wiki/dissident' title='dissident'>dissident</a>
<a href='/wiki/holohedral' title='holohedral'>holohedral</a>
<a href='/wiki/insidious' title='insidious'>insidious</a>
<a href='/wiki/nide' title='nide'>nide</a>
<a href='/wiki/nonresident' title='nonresident'>nonresident</a>
<a href='/wiki/obsess' title='obsess'>obsess</a>
<a href='/wiki/possess' title='possess'>possess</a>
<a href='/wiki/reside' title='reside'>reside</a>
<a href='/wiki/residence' title='residence'>residence</a>
<a href='/wiki/residency' title='residency'>residency</a>
<a href='/wiki/resident' title='resident'>resident</a>
<a href='/wiki/residential' title='residential'>residential</a>
<a href='/wiki/seat' title='seat'>seat</a>
<a href='/wiki/sedate' title='sedate'>sedate</a>
<a href='/wiki/sedentary' title='sedentary'>sedentary</a>
<a href='/wiki/see' title='see'>see</a>
<a href='/wiki/sessile' title='sessile'>sessile</a>
<a href='/wiki/session' title='session'>session</a>
<a href='/wiki/set' title='set'>set</a>
<a href='/wiki/settle' title='settle'>settle</a>
<a href='/wiki/siege' title='siege'>siege</a>
<a href='/wiki/sit' title='sit'>sit</a>
<a href='/wiki/sitzkrieg' title='sitzkrieg'>sitzkrieg</a>
<a href='/wiki/soot' title='soot'>soot</a>
<a href='/wiki/trespassory' title='trespassory'>trespassory</a>
Further reading
Latin
Old French
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin residentem, accusative singular of residēns, from the verb resideō.
Adjective
resident m (oblique and nominative feminine singular resident or residente)
References
- resident on the Anglo-Norman On-Line Hub
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