beacon

[bee-kuh n] /ˈbi kən/
noun
1.
a guiding or warning signal, as a light or fire, especially one in an elevated position.
2.
a tower or hill used for such purposes.
3.
a lighthouse, signal buoy, etc., on a shore or at a dangerous area at sea to warn and guide vessels.
4.
Navigation.
  1. radio beacon.
  2. a radar device at a fixed location that, upon receiving a radar pulse, transmits a reply pulse that enables the original sender to determine his or her position relative to the fixed location.
5.
a person, act, or thing that warns or guides.
6.
a person or thing that illuminates or inspires:
The Bible has been our beacon during this trouble.
7.
Digital Technology, web beacon.
verb (used with object)
8.
to serve as a beacon to; warn or guide.
9.
to furnish or mark with beacons:
a ship assigned to beacon the shoals.
verb (used without object)
10.
to serve or shine as a beacon:
A steady light beaconed from the shore.
Origin
before 950; Middle English beken, Old English bēacen sign, signal; cognate with Old Frisian bāken, Old Saxon bōkan, Old High German bouhhan
Related forms
beaconless, adjective
unbeaconed, adjective
Synonyms
1. beam, buoy, pharos; signal fire; balefire.

Beacon

[bee-kuh n] /ˈbi kən/
noun
1.
a city in SE New York.
British Dictionary definitions for beacon

beacon

/ˈbiːkən/
noun
1.
a signal fire or light on a hill, tower, etc, esp one used formerly as a warning of invasion
2.
a hill on which such fires were lit
3.
a lighthouse, signalling buoy, etc, used to warn or guide ships in dangerous waters
4.
short for radio beacon
5.
a radio or other signal marking a flight course in air navigation
6.
short for Belisha beacon
7.
a person or thing that serves as a guide, inspiration, or warning
8.
a stone set by a surveyor to mark a corner or line of a site boundary, etc
verb
9.
to guide or warn
10.
(intransitive) to shine
Word Origin
Old English beacen sign; related to Old Frisian bāken, Old Saxon bōcan, Old High German bouhhan
Word Origin and History for beacon
n.

Old English beacen "sign, portent, lighthouse," from West Germanic *baukna "beacon, signal" (cf. Old Frisian baken, Old Saxon bokan, Old High German bouhhan); not found outside Germanic. Perhaps borrowed from Latin bucina "a crooked horn or trumpet, signal horn." But more likely from PIE *bhew-, a variant of the base *bha- "to gleam, shine" (see phantasm). Figurative use from c.1600.

beacon in the Bible

a pole (Heb. to'ren) used as a standard or ensign set on the tops of mountains as a call to the people to assemble themselves for some great national purpose (Isa. 30:17). In Isa. 33:23 and Ezek. 27:5, the same word is rendered "mast." (See Banner.)

Encyclopedia Article for beacon

Beacon

city, Dutchess county, southeastern New York, U.S. It lies at the foot of Mount Beacon, on the east bank of the Hudson River (there bridged to Newburgh), 58 miles (93 km) north of New York City. It became a city when the 17th-century villages of Matteawan and Fishkill Landing were united in 1913. The name was inspired by the fires that blazed atop Mount Beacon during the American Revolution to warn George Washington of British troop movements; the mountain was later a resort, and the Mount Beacon Incline Railway (operated 1901-72) ascended its west spur (1,540 feet [469 metres] above the river). Industrialization began after the War of 1812 when businessman John Jacob Astor and others built a cotton mill and foundry. Manufactures include clothing, hats, countertops, and rubber fabricated products; the city also is the home of one of the world's largest art foundries. Madam Brett Homestead (1709) in Beacon and Van Wyck Homestead (1732; site of courts-martial during the American Revolution) in nearby Fishkill are preserved as museums. Pop. (1990) 13,243; (2000) 13,808.

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