source
n 1: the place where something begins, where it springs into
being; "the Italian beginning of the Renaissance";
"Jupiter was the origin of the radiation"; "Pittsburgh
is the source of the Ohio River"; "communism's Russian
root" [syn: {beginning}, {origin}, {root}, {rootage}]
2: a person who supplies information [syn: {informant}]
3: a publication (or a passage from a publication) that is
referred to; "he carried an armful of references back to
his desk"; "he spent hours looking for the source of that
quotation" [syn: {reference}]
4: a document (or organization) from which information is
obtained; "the reporter had two sources for the story"
5: a facility where something is available
6: anything that provides inspiration for later work [syn: {seed},
{germ}]
7: someone who originates or causes or initiates something; "he
was the generator of several complaints" [syn: {generator},
{author}]
8: (technology) a process by which energy or a substance enters
a system; "a heat source"; "a source of carbon dioxide"
[ant: {sink}]
9: anything (a person or animal or plant or substance) in which
an infectious agent normally lives and multiplies; "an
infectious agent depends on a reservoir for its survival"
[syn: {reservoir}]
v 1: get (a product) from another country or business; "She
sourced a supply of carpet"; "They are sourcing from
smaller companies"
2: specify the origin of; "The writer carefully sourced her
report"
Source: WordNet® 2.0
source n. [very common] In reference to software, `source' is
invariably shorthand for `source code', the preferred human-readable and
human-modifiable form of the program. This is as opposed to object code,
the derived binary executable form of a program. This shorthand readily
takes derivative forms; one may speak of "the sources of a system" or of
"having source".
Source: The Jargon File