pivot
See also: pívot
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French pivot, from (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Old French pivot (“hinge pin, pivot, penis”) (12 c.), of unknown origin.
Pronunciation
Noun
pivot (plural pivots)
- A thing on which something turns; specifically a metal pointed pin or short shaft in machinery, such as the end of an axle or spindle.
- Something or someone having a paramount significance in a certain situation.
- 1905, Baroness Emmuska Orczy, chapter 1, in The Tragedy in Dartmoor Terrace[1]:
- “The story of this adoption is, of course, the pivot round which all the circumstances of the mysterious tragedy revolved. Mrs. Yule had an only son, namely, William, to whom she was passionately attached ; but, like many a fond mother, she had the desire of mapping out that son's future entirely according to her own ideas. […]”
- Act of turning on one foot.
- 2012, Banking reform: Sticking together, The Economist, 18th August issue
- Sandy Weill was the man who stitched Citigroup together in the 1990s and in the process helped bury the Glass-Steagall act, a Depression-era law separating retail and investment banking. Last month he performed a perfect pivot: he now wants regulators to undo his previous work.
- 2012, Banking reform: Sticking together, The Economist, 18th August issue
- (military) The officer or soldier who simply turns in his place while the company or line moves around him in wheeling.
- (roller derby) A player with responsibility for co-ordinating their team in a particular jam.
- (computing) An element of a set to be sorted that is chosen as a midpoint, so as to divide the other elements into two groups to be dealt with recursively.
- (computing) A pivot table.
- (graphical user interface) Any of a row of captioned elements used to navigate to subpages, rather like tabs.
- (mathematics) An element of a matrix that is used as a focus for row operations, such as dividing the row by the pivot, or adding multiples of the row to other rows making all other values in the pivot column 0.
- (Canadian football) A quarterback.
Derived terms
Translations
that on which something turns
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something having a paramount significance
act of turning on one foot
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
See also
Verb
pivot (third-person singular simple present pivots, present participle pivoting, simple past and past participle pivoted)
- (intransitive) To turn on an exact spot.
Translations
to turn on an exact spot
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Finnish
Noun
pivot
French
Etymology
From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Old French, of unknown origin.
Pronunciation
Noun
pivot m (plural pivots)
Derived terms
Further reading
- “pivot”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Spanish
Etymology
(deprecated template usage) [etyl] English
Noun
pivot m (plural pivots)
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