plex

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See also: -plex

English

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Etymology

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Ultimately from -plex, from Latin plectere

Noun

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plex (plural plexes)

  1. (Canada) A building, such as a duplex or triplex, with a number of apartments (typically two to four) that all open directly to the outside.
    • 2001, Thomas F. McIlwraith, Edward K. Muller, North America: The Historical Geography of a Changing Continent, page 457:
      Most new housing has taken the form of single-family dwellings, not plexes, and levels of home ownership have risen steadily.
    • 2004, Richard Harris, Creeping Conformity: How Canada Became Suburban, 1900-1960, page 34:
      English-style terraced houses or the cheaper type of Montreal plexes that opened directly onto the street made such a way of life possible, but just barely.
  2. (computing) A designated portion of a disk, usually set up to mirror some of the contents.
    • 2002, Paul Massiglia, Highly Available Storage for Windows Servers, page 60:
      Striped volumes of mirrored plexes can survive failure of up to half of their disks.
  3. (computing) A tree-like structure in which each child can have multiple parents.
    • 1975, James Martin, Computer Data-Base Organization, pages 89-99:
      If a child in a data relationship has more than one parent, the relationship cannot be described as a tree or hierarchical structure. Instead it is described as a ... plex structure.
  4. Clipping of multiplex.

Romanian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Latin plexus or French plexus.

Noun

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plex n (plural plexuri)

  1. plexus

Declension

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