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macintosh

[ UK /mˈækɪntˌɒʃ/ ]
[ US /ˈmækənˌtɔʃ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a waterproof raincoat made of rubberized fabric
  2. a lightweight waterproof (usually rubberized) fabric

How To Use macintosh In A Sentence

  • After the war, her costume ‘is covered, winter and summer, by a frayed macintosh… and she now wears a hat as well - a thing like a basket pulled down over her straying, pepper-and-salt hair’.
  • It took three years after the Macintosh's introduction in 1984 before it outsold the Apple II, its predecessor.
  • In a library environment the term workstation often is used to refer to any personal computer such as an IBM PC or an Apple Macintosh.
  • Vegh was the whole staff, assisted by his answering machine and his MacIntosh computer in his University Heights studio apartment.
  • Ms. MacIntosh portrays The Fourth as a former good-time Charlie indulging in booze, babes and fast cars before pulling himself together to claim his royal birthright. This Bud's For Sale
  • People forget that the years in which Apple allowed Macintosh clones were among its darkest.
  • And by the time that Windows 2 is released in 1987, the Macintosh screen looks very much like it does to this day (possibly excepting the OSX leap).
  • Most Macintosh computers can decompress files automatically.
  • For Apple, countering the perception that there was little difference between Macintosh and Windows was a difficult task.
  • I'll let you enjoy the silly stuff over there; here I want to highlight one paragraph about finding new words and usages on the internet:That's where Oxford lexicographer Erin McKean has found words like farb (not authentic, badly done), nomenklatura (non-literally; by analogy), drabble (a short story of 100 words or fewer), haxie (a hack for the Macintosh operating system) and swancho (a combination poncho/sweater). Languagehat.com: NOMENKLATURA?
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