band
band1 / band/ • n. 1. a flat, thin strip or loop of material put around something, typically to hold it together or to decorate it: wads of banknotes fastened with gummed paper bands. ∎ a strip of material forming part of a garment: hatband waistband. ∎ a plain ring for the finger, esp. a gold wedding ring: a narrow band of gold was her only jewelry. ∎ Ornithol. a ring of metal placed around a bird's leg to identify it.2. a stripe or elongated area of a different color, texture, or composition than its surroundings: a long, narrow band of cloud.3. a range of frequencies or wavelengths in a spectrum (esp. of radio frequencies): channels in the UHF band.• v. [tr.] (usu. be banded) 1. surround (an object) with something in the form of a strip or ring, typically for reinforcement or decoration: doors are banded with iron to make them stronger. ∎ Ornithol. put a band on (a bird) for identification.2. mark (something) with a stripe or stripes of a different color: the bird's bill is banded across the middle with black | [as adj.] (banded) banded agate. band2 • n. 1. a group of people who have a common interest or purpose: guerrilla bands a determined band of activists. ∎ Anthropol. a subgroup of a tribe.2. a group of musicians who play together, in particular: ∎ a small group of musicians and vocalists who play pop, jazz, or rock music: the band's last two albums a rock band. ∎ a group of musicians who play brass, wind, or percussion instruments: a military band. ∎ inf. an orchestra.3. a herd or flock: moving bands of caribou.• v. [intr.] (of people or organizations) form a group for a mutual purpose: local people banded together to fight the company.
band
1. Flat raised horizontal strip on a façade, occasionally ornamented, sometimes coinciding with cills or floor-levels, also called a band-course, band-moulding, belt-course, or string-course. The term can therefore be applied to the fasciae on an architrave, and sometimes (though rarely) to a fillet, list, or taenia. In Classical Orders dentils and modillions project from such bands called dentil-or modillion-bands.
2. Plain block interrupting an architectural element, such as a column. In this sense, banded is used to describe the condition. Examples are banded architrave (one with projecting blocks placed at regular intervals between which the architrave is visible, as in a Gibbs surround); banded, blocked, ringed, or rusticated column (with shaft interrupted by plain or rusticated square or cylindrical blocks, although some authorities prefer to use banded to mean a column-shaft made up of alternating larger and smaller drums, and blocked to indicate square blocks alternating with circular shaft-drums); banded pilaster (pilaster-shaft interrupted by rectangular blocks at intervals, corresponding to banded columns); and banded rustication (smooth ashlar alternating with rusticated bands or blocks projecting beyond the naked of the wall).
3. Bond, in Scots, hence inband (header) and outband (stretcher or quoin with long side on face and short on reveals).
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1. A set of adjacent tracks on a magnetic or optical disk.
2. A section of the frequency spectrum lying between limits that are defined according to some requirement or to some functional aspect of a given signal or transmission channel. When used as a suffix the word is a contraction of bandwidth, as in narrowband, wideband.
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a company of persons or, sometimes, animals; a company of musicians. See also company, party, troop.
Examples: band of camels, 1611; of fold, 1490; of followers; of fugitives, 1876; of gorillas [a male with one or more females and young]; of men; of music, 1660; of musicians; of outlaws; of pilgrims [hymn]; of plovers; of robbers, 1826; of strangers, 1601; of violins.
band
Hence band vb. XVI; cf. DISBAND.