sign-on

[sahyn-on, -awn] /ˈsaɪnˌɒn, -ˌɔn/
noun
1.
Radio and Television. the opening salutation, station identification, etc., at the beginning of the broadcast day.
2.
an act or instance of signing on.
Origin of sign-on
1880-85; noun use of verb phrase sign on

log1

[lawg, log] /lɔg, lɒg/
noun
1.
a portion or length of the trunk or of a large limb of a felled tree.
2.
something inert, heavy, or not sentient.
3.
Nautical. any of various devices for determining the speed of a ship, as a chip log or patent log.
4.
any of various records, made in rough or finished form, concerning a trip made by a ship or aircraft and dealing with particulars of navigation, weather, engine performance, discipline, and other pertinent details; logbook.
5.
Movies. an account describing or denoting each shot as it is taken, written down during production and referred to in editing the film.
6.
a register of the operation of a machine.
7.
Also called well log. a record kept during the drilling of a well, especially of the geological formations penetrated.
8.
Computers. any of various chronological records made concerning the use of a computer system, the changes made to data, etc.
9.
Radio and Television. a written account of everything transmitted by a station or network.
10.
Also called log of wood. Australian Slang. a lazy, dull-witted person; fool.
verb (used with object), logged, logging.
11.
to cut (trees) into logs:
to log pine trees for fuel.
12.
to cut down the trees or timber on (land):
We logged the entire area in a week.
13.
to enter in a log; compile; amass; keep a record of:
to log a day's events.
14.
to make (a certain speed), as a ship or airplane:
We are logging 18 knots.
15.
to travel for (a certain distance or a certain amount of time), according to the record of a log:
We logged 30 miles the first day. He has logged 10,000 hours flying time.
verb (used without object), logged, logging.
16.
to cut down trees and get out logs from the forest for timber:
to log for a living.
Verb phrases
17.
log in,
  1. Also, log on, sign on. Computers. to enter identifying data, as a username or password, into a database, mobile device, or computer, especially a multiuser computer or a remote or networked system, so as to to access and use it:
    Log in to start your work session. Log in to your account to pay your bill online.
  2. to enter or include any item of information or data in a record, account, etc.
18.
log off/out, Computers. to terminate a session.
Origin
1350-1400; Middle English logge, variant of lugge pole, limb of tree; compare obsolete logget pole; see lugsail, logbook
Related forms
loggish, adjective
unlogged, adjective

sign

[sahyn] /saɪn/
noun
1.
a token; indication.
2.
any object, action, event, pattern, etc., that conveys a meaning.
3.
a conventional or arbitrary mark, figure, or symbol used as an abbreviation for the word or words it represents.
4.
a motion or gesture used to express or convey an idea, command, decision, etc.:
Her nod was a sign that it was time to leave.
5.
a notice, bearing a name, direction, warning, or advertisement, that is displayed or posted for public view:
a traffic sign; a store sign.
6.
a trace; vestige:
There wasn't a sign of them.
7.
an arbitrary or conventional symbol used in musical notation to indicate tonality, tempo, etc.
8.
Medicine/Medical. the objective indications of a disease.
9.
any meaningful gestural unit belonging to a sign language.
10.
an omen; portent:
a sign of approaching decadence.
12.
sign language (def 1).
13.
Usually, signs. traces, as footprints, of a wild animal.
14.
Mathematics.
  1. a plus sign or minus sign used as a symbol for indicating addition or subtraction.
  2. a plus sign or minus sign used as a symbol for indicating the positive or negative value of a quantity, as an integer.
  3. multiplication sign.
  4. division sign.
  5. a symbol, as or !, used to indicate a radical or factorial operation.
verb (used with object)
15.
to affix a signature to:
to sign a letter.
16.
to write as a signature:
to sign one's name.
17.
to engage by written agreement:
to sign a new player.
18.
to mark with a sign, especially the sign of the cross.
19.
to communicate by means of a sign; signal:
He signed his wish to leave.
20.
to convey (a message) in a sign language.
21.
Obsolete. to direct or appoint by a sign.
verb (used without object)
22.
to write one's signature, as a token of agreement, obligation, receipt, etc.:
to sign for a package.
23.
to make a sign or signal:
He signed to her to go away.
24.
to employ a sign language for communication.
25.
to obligate oneself by signature:
He signed with another team for the next season.
Verb phrases
26.
sign away/over, to assign or dispose of by affixing one's signature to a document:
She signed over her fortune to the church.
27.
sign in, to record or authorize one's arrival (or departure) by signing a register.
Also, sign out.
28.
sign off,
  1. to withdraw, as from some responsibility or connection.
  2. to cease radio or television broadcasting, especially at the end of the day.
  3. Informal. to become silent:
    He had exhausted conversation topics and signed off.
  4. to indicate one's approval explicitly if not formally:
    The president is expected to sign off on the new agreement.
29.
sign on,
  1. to employ; hire.
  2. to bind oneself to work, as by signing a contract:
    He signed on as a pitcher with a major-league team.
  3. to start radio or television broadcasting, especially at the beginning of the day.
  4. Computers. log1 (def 17a).
30.
sign up, to enlist, as in an organization or group; to register or subscribe:
to sign up for the navy; to sign up for class.
Origin
1175-1225; (noun) Middle English signe < Old French < Latin signum mark, sign, ensign, signal, image; (v.) Middle English signen to mark with a sign, especially the sign of the cross < Old French signer < Latin signāre to mark with a sign, inscribe, affix a seal to, derivative of signum
Related forms
signless, adjective
signlike, adjective
postsign, verb (used with object)
unsigned, adjective
Can be confused
sign, sing (see synonym study at the current entry)
Synonyms
1. trace, hint, suggestion. 1, 4. signal. 10. indication, hint, augury. Sign, omen, portent name that which gives evidence of a future event. Sign is a general word for whatever gives evidence of an event—past, present, or future: Dark clouds are a sign of rain or snow. An omen is an augury or warning of things to come; it is used only of the future, in general, as good or bad: birds of evil omen. Portent, limited, like omen, to prophecy of the future, may be used of a specific event, usually a misfortune: portents of war.
British Dictionary definitions for sign on

sign on

verb (adverb)
1.
(transitive) to hire or employ
2.
(intransitive) to commit oneself to a job, activity, etc
3.
(intransitive) (Brit) to register as unemployed with the Department of Social Security

log1

/lɒɡ/
noun
1.
  1. a section of the trunk or a main branch of a tree, when stripped of branches
  2. (modifier) constructed out of logs: a log cabin
2.
  1. a detailed record of a voyage of a ship or aircraft
  2. a record of the hours flown by pilots and aircrews
  3. a book in which these records are made; logbook
3.
a written record of information about transmissions kept by radio stations, amateur radio operators, etc
4.
  1. a device consisting of a float with an attached line, formerly used to measure the speed of a ship See also chip log
  2. heave the log, to determine a ship's speed with such a device
5.
(Austral) a claim for better pay and conditions presented by a trade union to an employer
6.
like a log, without stirring or being disturbed (in the phrase sleep like a log)
verb logs, logging, logged
7.
(transitive) to fell the trees of (a forest, area, etc) for timber
8.
(transitive) to saw logs from (trees)
9.
(intransitive) to work at the felling of timber
10.
(transitive) to enter (a distance, event, etc) in a logbook or log
11.
(transitive) to record the punishment received by (a sailor) in a logbook
12.
(transitive) to travel (a specified distance or time) or move at (a specified speed)
Word Origin
C14: origin obscure

log2

/lɒɡ/
noun
1.
short for logarithm

sign

/saɪn/
noun
1.
something that indicates or acts as a token of a fact, condition, etc, that is not immediately or outwardly observable
2.
an action or gesture intended to convey information, a command, etc
3.
  1. a board, placard, etc, displayed in public and inscribed with words or designs intended to inform, warn, etc
  2. (as modifier): a sign painter
4.
an arbitrary or conventional mark or device that stands for a word, phrase, etc
5.
(maths, logic)
  1. any symbol indicating an operation: a plus sign, an implication sign
  2. the positivity or negativity of a number, quantity, or expression: subtraction from zero changes the sign of an expression
6.
an indication or vestige: the house showed no signs of being occupied
7.
a portentous or significant event
8.
an indication, such as a scent or spoor, of the presence of an animal
9.
(med) any objective evidence of the presence of a disease or disorder Compare symptom (sense 1)
10.
(astrology) Compare sign of the zodiac
verb
11.
to write (one's name) as a signature to (a document, etc) in attestation, confirmation, ratification, etc
12.
(intransitive) often foll by to. to make a sign; signal
13.
to engage or be engaged by written agreement, as a player for a team, etc
14.
(transitive) to outline in gestures a sign over, esp the sign of the cross
15.
(transitive) to indicate by or as if by a sign; betoken
16.
(intransitive) to use sign language
Derived Forms
signable, adjective
Word Origin
C13: from Old French signe, from Latin signum a sign
Word Origin and History for sign on

log

n.

unshaped large piece of tree, early 14c., of unknown origin. Old Norse had lag "felled tree" (from stem of liggja "to lie"), but on phonological grounds many etymologists deny that this is the root of English log. Instead, they suggest an independent formation meant to "express the notion of something massive by a word of appropriate sound." OED compares clog (n.) in its original Middle English sense "lump of wood." Log cabin (1770) in American English has been a figure of the honest pioneer since the 1840 presidential campaign of William Henry Harrison. Falling off a log as a type of something easy to do is from 1839.

"record of observations, readings, etc.," 1842, sailor's shortening of log-book "daily record of a ship's speed, progress, etc." (1670s), from log (n.1) which is so called because a wooden float at the end of a line was cast out to measure a ship's speed. General sense by 1913.

v.

"to fell a tree," 1717; earlier "to strip a tree" (1690s), from log (n.1). Related: Logged; logging.

"to enter into a log-book," 1823, from log (n.2). Meaning "to attain (a speed) as noted in a log" is recorded by 1883. Related: Logged; logging.

sign

n.

early 13c., "gesture or motion of the hand," especially one meant to communicate something, from Old French signe "sign, mark," from Latin signum "identifying mark, token, indication, symbol; proof; military standard, ensign; a signal, an omen; sign in the heavens, constellation," according to Watkins, literally "standard that one follows," from PIE *sekw-no-, from root *sekw- (1) "to follow" (see sequel).

Ousted native token. Meaning "a mark or device having some special importance" is recorded from late 13c.; that of "a miracle" is from c.1300. Zodiacal sense in English is from mid-14c. Sense of "characteristic device attached to the front of an inn, shop, etc., to distinguish it from others" is first recorded mid-15c. Meaning "token or signal of some condition" (late 13c.) is behind sign of the times (1520s). In some uses, the word probably is a shortening of ensign. Sign language is recorded from 1847; earlier hand-language (1670s).

v.

c.1300, "to make the sign of the cross," from Old French signier "to make a sign (to someone); to mark," from Latin signare "to set a mark upon, mark out, designate; mark with a stamp; distinguish, adorn;" figuratively "to point out, signify, indicate," from signum (see sign (n.)). Sense of "to mark, stamp" is attested from mid-14c.; that of "to affix one's name" is from late 15c. Meaning "to communicate by hand signs" is recorded from 1700. Related: Signed; signing.

sign on in Medicine

sign (sīn)
n.

  1. See symptom.

  2. Something that suggests the presence or existence of a fact, condition, or quality.

  3. A trace or vestige, as of disease or life.

sign on in Science
log
  (lôg)   
A logarithm.
sign
  (sīn)   
  1. A body manifestation, usually detected on physical examination or through laboratory tests or xrays, that indicates the presence of abnormality or disease. Compare symptom.

  2. See symbol. See Table at symbol.


Slang definitions & phrases for sign on

sign off

verb phrase

To stop talking; shut up

[1928+; fr radio broadcasting, ''to end transmission and go off the air'']


siff

Related Terms

syph


log

Related Terms

beat one's meat, easy as pie


sign on in the Bible

the smallest measure for liquids used by the Hebrews (Lev. 14:10, 12, 15, 21, 24), called in the Vulgate sextarius. It is the Hebrew unit of measure of capacity, and is equal to the contents of six ordinary hen's eggs=the twelfth part of a him, or nearly a pint.

Idioms and Phrases with sign on

sign on

1.
Enlist oneself as an employee, as in Arthur decided to sign on with the new software company. [ Late 1800s ]
2.
Begin radio or television broadcasting, especially at the beginning of the day, as in What time does the station sign on? [ c. 1920 ]

log

In addition to the idiom beginning with
log