Dictionary![]() ![]() com•mandPronunciation: (ku-mand', -mänd'), [key] —v.t. 1. to direct with specific authority or prerogative; order: The captain commanded his men to attack. 2. to require authoritatively; demand: She commanded silence. 3. to have or exercise authority or control over; be master of; have at one's bidding or disposal: The Pharaoh commanded 10,000 slaves. 4. to deserve and receive (respect, sympathy, attention, etc.): He commands much respect for his attitude. 5. to dominate by reason of location; overlook: The hill commands the sea. 6. to have authority over and responsibility for (a military or naval unit or installation); be in charge of. —v.i. 1. to issue an order or orders. 2. to be in charge; have authority. 3. to occupy a dominating position; look down upon or over a body of water, region, etc. —n. 1. the act of commanding or ordering. 2. an order given by one in authority: The colonel gave the command to attack. 3. Mil. a. an order in prescribed words, usually given in a loud voice to troops at close-order drill: The command was “Right shoulder arms!” b. the order of execution or the second part of any two-part close-order drill command, as face in Right face! c. (cap.) a principal component of the U.S. Air Force: Strategic Air Command. d. a body of troops or a station, ship, etc., under a commander. 4. the possession or exercise of controlling authority: a lieutenant in command of a platoon. 5. expertise; mastery: He has a command of French, Russian, and German. 6. Brit.a royal order. 7. power of dominating a region by reason of location; extent of view or outlook: the command of the valley from the hill. 8. Computers. a. an electric impulse, signal, or set of signals for initiating an operation in a computer. b. a character, symbol, or item of information for instructing a computer to perform a specific task. c. a single instruction. —adj. 1. of, pertaining to, or for use in the exercise of command: a command car; command post. 2. of or pertaining to a commander: a command decision. 3. ordered by a sovereign, as if by a sovereign, or by the exigencies of a situation: a command performance. Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Copyright © 1997, by Random House, Inc., on Infoplease.
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