A designation for a letter drive on a computer, as in a hard drive, hard drive partition, CD-ROM drive, etc.
Generally, because A: is reserved for a 3 1/2 inch floppy drive, B: for the obsolete 5 1/4 floppy drive (the letter is skipped if the drive does not exist), and C: for the first hard drive, D: is most often a second hard drive or a first CD-ROM drive.
Letters thereafter, such as E:, F:, G:, etc. can be filled by CD-ROM drives, burners, external hard drives, USB drives, and the like as necessary. While not required to be in alphabetical order, it is this way by default.
Generally, because A: is reserved for a 3 1/2 inch floppy drive, B: for the obsolete 5 1/4 floppy drive (the letter is skipped if the drive does not exist), and C: for the first hard drive, D: is most often a second hard drive or a first CD-ROM drive.
Letters thereafter, such as E:, F:, G:, etc. can be filled by CD-ROM drives, burners, external hard drives, USB drives, and the like as necessary. While not required to be in alphabetical order, it is this way by default.
by Kenthar August 31, 2005
by Ben S April 27, 2006
:) - is a modest smile
:D - is a shit faced ear to ear grin, saying to the world, i know, i'm amazing
:D - is a shit faced ear to ear grin, saying to the world, i know, i'm amazing
by RedRussia60 April 16, 2007
Main entry: no (D)
Pronunciation: \ˈnō\ \ˈdē\
Function: noun
1: When a corrupt politician in the Democratic party is mentioned in the liberal media such as a news paper, the party affiliation is almost always dropped unlike Republicans which will have have the party affiliation with the name usually highlighted. You will know if a Republican was arrested if your news paper arrives with a car battery to power the glowing neon signs in front of that politician's party affiliation and name indicating a Republican which will be repeated infinitely.
2: A corrupt Democrat.
Pronunciation: \ˈnō\ \ˈdē\
Function: noun
1: When a corrupt politician in the Democratic party is mentioned in the liberal media such as a news paper, the party affiliation is almost always dropped unlike Republicans which will have have the party affiliation with the name usually highlighted. You will know if a Republican was arrested if your news paper arrives with a car battery to power the glowing neon signs in front of that politician's party affiliation and name indicating a Republican which will be repeated infinitely.
2: A corrupt Democrat.
"Hey! Look at this paper. Another no (D) was arrested for a pay to play scandal."
"No (D)? Oh you mean another corrupt Democrat was in the paper."
"No (D)? Oh you mean another corrupt Democrat was in the paper."
by Foznots August 04, 2009
by Oli a smole lover indeed October 05, 2006
i'm so hot right now :d
by kayte:] April 29, 2009