defect.

defect.
de|fect «noun. DEE fehkt; verb. dih FEHKT», noun, verb.
–n.
1. a fault; blemish; imperfection: »

The hole was a defect in the material. A bad temper was the defect in his nature.

2. lack of something needed for completeness; a falling short: »

A defect in his sense of right and wrong made him steal.

SYNONYM(S): want, deficiency.
–v.i.
to forsake one's own country, group, party, or religion, for another, especially another that is opposed to or different from it: »

After he lost the nomination, he defected to the other party. A top Polish officer has defected to the West and is now hiding in the U.S. (Wall Street Journal).

[< Latin dēfectus, -ūs revolt, failure < dēficere; see etym. under deficient (Cf.deficient)]
Synonym Study noun. 1 Defect, flaw, blemish mean an imperfection or fault. Defect, the general word, applies to any imperfection on the surface or in the makeup of a person or thing: »

A hearing aid helps to overcome defects in hearing. No person is without defects.

Flaw applies to a defect in structure, suggesting a crack or break when used literally, a fault in character when used figuratively: »

That bubble is a flaw in the glass. Jealousy is the great flaw in his character.

Blemish applies to an external defect, such as a stain on the surface of some object or a pimple on the skin, and when used figuratively suggests a slight defect: »

His reputation is without blemish.

defect.,
defective.

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • defect — de·fect / dē ˌfekt, di fekt/ n: something or a lack of something that results in incompleteness, inadequacy, or imperfection: as a: a flaw in something (as a product) esp. that creates an unreasonable risk of harm in its normal use see also… …   Law dictionary

  • defect — DEFÉCT, Ă, defecţi, te, s.n., adj. 1. s.n. Lipsă, scădere, imperfecţiune materială, fizică sau morală; cusur, meteahnă, neajuns, beteşug, hibă. ♦ Deranjament, stricăciune care împiedică funcţionarea unei maşini, a unui aparat. ♦ Ceea ce nu este… …   Dicționar Român

  • Defect — Defect, defects, or defected may refer to: Geometry and physical sciences Defect (geometry), a characteristic of a polyhedron Topological defect Isoperimetric defect Crystallographic defect, a structural imperfection in a crystal Biology and… …   Wikipedia

  • Defect — De*fect , n. [L. defectus, fr. deficere, defectum, to desert, fail, be wanting; de + facere to make, do. See {Fact}, {Feat}, and cf. {Deficit}.] 1. Want or absence of something necessary for completeness or perfection; deficiency; opposed to… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • defect — Ⅰ. defect [1] ► NOUN ▪ a shortcoming, imperfection, or lack. ORIGIN Latin defectus, from deficere desert or fail . Ⅱ. defect [2] ► VERB ▪ abandon one s country or cause in favour of an opposing one …   English terms dictionary

  • defect — [dē′fekt΄; ] also, and for v. always [, dē fekt′, difekt′] n. [ME < L defectus < deficere, to undo, fail < de , from + facere, to DO1] 1. lack of something necessary for completeness; deficiency; shortcoming 2. an imperfection or… …   English World dictionary

  • Defect — De*fect , v. t. To injure; to damage. None can my life defect. [R.] Troubles of Q. Elizabeth (1639). [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Defect — Defect, lat., mangelhaft; als Hauptwort D., Mangel, Gebrechen; defectiren, eine Rechnung untersuchen in Beziehung auf Rechnungsfehler; defectiv, was defect. – Defectbogen, im Buchhandel ein nachverlangter Bogen. – Defecte, in der Buchdruckerei… …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • defect — (n.) early 15c., from M.Fr. defect and directly from L. defectus failure, revolt, falling away, from pp. of deficere to fail, desert (see DEFICIENT (Cf. deficient)). As a verb, from 1570s. Related: Defected; defecting …   Etymology dictionary

  • defect — [n] blemish, imperfection birthmark, blot, blotch, break, bug, catch, check, crack, deficiency, deformity, discoloration, drawback, error, failing, fault, flaw, foible, frailty, gap, glitch, gremlin, hole, infirmity, injury, irregularity, kink,… …   New thesaurus

  • Defect — De*fect , v. i. To fail; to become deficient. [Obs.] Defected honor. Warner. [1913 Webster] 2. to abandon one country or faction, and join another. [PJC] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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