资料来源 : pyDict
入口,大门门的
资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Portal \Por"tal\, n. [OF. portal, F. portail, LL. portale, fr.
L. porta a gate. See {Port} a gate.]
1. A door or gate; hence, a way of entrance or exit,
especially one that is grand and imposing.
Thick with sparkling orient gems The portal shone.
--Milton.
From out the fiery portal of the east. --Shak.
2. (Arch.)
(a) The lesser gate, where there are two of different
dimensions.
(b) Formerly, a small square corner in a room separated
from the rest of the apartment by wainscoting, forming
a short passage to another apartment.
(c) By analogy with the French portail, used by recent
writers for the whole architectural composition which
surrounds and includes the doorways and porches of a
church.
3. (Bridge Building) The space, at one end, between opposite
trusses when these are terminated by inclined braces.
4. A prayer book or breviary; a portass. [Obs.]
{Portal bracing} (Bridge Building), a combination of struts
and ties which lie in the plane of the inclined braces at
a portal, serving to transfer wind pressure from the upper
parts of the trusses to an abutment or pier of the bridge.
Portal \Por"tal\, a. (Anat.)
Of or pertaining to a porta, especially the porta of the
liver; as, the portal vein, which enters the liver at the
porta, and divides into capillaries after the manner of an
artery.
Note: Portal is applied to other veins which break up into
capillaries; as, the renal portal veins in the frog.
资料来源 : WordNet®
portal
n 1: a grand and imposing entrance (often extended
metaphorically); "the portals of the cathedral"; "the
portals of heaven"; "the portals of success"
2: a site that the owner positions as an entrance to other
sites on the internet; "a portal typically has search
engines and free email and chat rooms etc." [syn: {portal
site}]
3: a short vein that carries blood into the liver [syn: {portal
vein}, {hepatic portal vein}, {vena portae}]
资料来源 : Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing
PORTAL
Process-Oriented Real-Time Algorithmic Language.
["PORTAL - A Pascal-based Real-Time Programming Language",
R. Schild in Algorithmic Languages, J.W. deBakker et al eds,
N-H 1981].
portal
A {web site} that aims to be an entry point
to the {World-Wide Web}, typically offering a {search engine}
and/or links to useful pages, and possibly news or other
services. These services are usually provided for free in the
hope that users will make the site their default {home page}
or at least visit it often. Popular examples are {Yahoo} and
{MSN}. Most portals on the {Internet} exist to generate
advertising income for their owners, others may be focused on
a specific group of users and may be part of an {intranet} or
{extranet}. Some may just concentrate on one particular
subject, say technology or medicine, and are known as a
{vertical portals}.
(2001-07-07)