Online Encyclopedia

STANDARD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 772 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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STANDARD  , a.

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term with three main meanings: (I) an ensign or flag; (2) a fixed
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weight, measure, value or quality established by law or customarily recognized as a unit of comparison by which the correctness of others can be determined; (3) an upright or
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standing
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object, such as a large candelabrum, or, particularly, a fruit-tree which stands without support . With regard to the derivation, the word which appears in most
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European
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languages, e.g . Du. standaard, Ger . Standarte, O . Fr. estandart, estendard, mod. etendard, Ital. stendale, stendardo, &c., is to be referred to the Teut. standan, to stand, and refers to the fixed pole to which an object or a pole was attached . The " standard " as a military ensign was properly stationary and served as the
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signal of the position of its owner on the ordered field of
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battle . The O . Fr. form estendard points to the influence of
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Lat. extendere, to spread out, extend, of the flag when hung upon the pole (see further FLAG for the various meanings of the word and its
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history) . The use of the term for a recognized unit of comparison is due probably to the fact that it is something fixed or set up,
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stable, and not to any fanciful reference to the ensign or flag as the object to which one turns as a rallying-point . For the standard weights and
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measures see WEIGHTS AND MEASURES and
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STANDARDS DEPARTMENT below . There are many other standards, such as electrical standards (see
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ELECTRICITY), standard solutions in chemistry (q.v.) for the purpose of volumetric analysis, &c . In
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engineering, the component parts of
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machines or other structures are " standardized " in accordance with agreed measurements .

For " standard

time " see TIME, STANDARD .

End of Article: STANDARD
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STANCHION (Fr. etancon, a wooden post)
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BATTLE OF THE STANDARD

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