What is the meaning of Core?

In general usage, an essential part of a thing surrounded by other essential things.

  1. The central part of a fruit, containing the kernels or seeds.

    The central part of a fruit, containing the kernels or seeds.

    The heart or inner part of a physical thing.

    The anatomical core, muscles which bridge abdomen and thorax.

    The center or inner part of a space or area.

    The most important part of a thing or aggregate of things wherever located and whether of any determinate location at all; the essence.

    A technical term for classification of things denoting those parts of a category that are most easily or most likely understood as within it.

    1. Used to designate the main and most diverse monophyletic group within a clade or taxonomic group.
    2. The set of feasible allocations that cannot be improved upon by a subset (a coalition) of the economy's agents.

    Used to designate the main and most diverse monophyletic group within a clade or taxonomic group.

    The set of feasible allocations that cannot be improved upon by a subset (a coalition) of the economy's agents.

    A thematic aesthetic; objects related to a specific topic

    particular parts of technical instruments or machines essential in function:

    1. The portion of a mold that creates a cavity or impression within the part (casting or molded part) or that makes a hole in or through the part.

      The portion of a mold that creates a cavity or impression within the part (casting or molded part) or that makes a hole in or through the part.

      Ellipsis of core memory.; magnetic data storage.

      An individual computer processor, in the sense when several processors (called cores or CPU cores) are plugged together in one single integrated circuit to work as one (called a multi-core processor).

      The material between surface materials in a structured composite sandwich material.

      The inner part of a nuclear reactor, in which the nuclear reaction takes place.

      The central fissile portion of a fission weapon.

      A piece of ferromagnetic material (e.g., soft iron), inside the windings of an electromagnet, that channels the magnetic field.

      A hollow cylindrical piece of cardboard around which a web of paper or plastic is wound.

      Hence particular parts of a subject studied or examined by technical operations, likened by position and practical or structural robustness to kernels, cores in the most vulgar sense above.

      1. A tiny sample of organic material obtained by means of a fine-needle biopsy.
      2. The bony process which forms the central axis of the horns in many animals.
      3. A disorder of sheep caused by worms in the liver.
      4. The central part of a protein's structure, consisting mostly of hydrophobic amino acids.
      5. A cylindrical sample of rock or other materials obtained by core drilling.
      6. An atomic nucleus plus inner electrons (i.e., an atom, except for its valence electrons).

      A tiny sample of organic material obtained by means of a fine-needle biopsy.

      The bony process which forms the central axis of the horns in many animals.

      A disorder of sheep caused by worms in the liver.

      The central part of a protein's structure, consisting mostly of hydrophobic amino acids.

      A cylindrical sample of rock or other materials obtained by core drilling.

      An atomic nucleus plus inner electrons (i.e., an atom, except for its valence electrons).

      Forming the most important or essential part.

      Deeply and authentically involved in the culture surrounding the sport.

      To remove the core of an apple or other fruit.

      To cut or drill through the core of (something).

      To extract a sample with a drill.

      A body of individuals; an assemblage.

      A miner's underground working time or shift.

      Alternative form of cor: a former Hebrew and Phoenician unit of volume.

      A deposit paid by the purchaser of a rebuilt part, to be refunded on return of a used, rebuildable part, or the returned rebuildable part itself.

      An aesthetic ending in the suffix -core, such as cottagecore, normcore, etc.

      heart

      core (centre of a fruit)

      The middle of something.

      heart

      Alternative form of cuore

      ablative singular of coris

      heart

      core (independent unit in a processor with several such units)

      inflection of corar:

      1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
      2. third-person singular imperative

      first/third-person singular present subjunctive

      third-person singular imperative

      heart

      Source: wiktionary.org