1.something that is contemplated, devised, or planned; plan;scheme.
2.a large or major undertaking, especially one involvingconsiderable money, personnel, and equipment.
3.a specific task of investigation, especially in scholarship.
4.Education . a supplementary, long-term educational assignment necessitating personal initiative, undertaken byan individual student or a group of students.
5.Often, projects. housing project.
6.to propose, contemplate, or plan.
7.to throw, cast, or impel forward or onward.
8.to set forth or calculate (some future thing): They projected
2.a large or major undertaking, especially one involvingconsiderable money, personnel, and equipment.
3.a specific task of investigation, especially in scholarship.
4.Education . a supplementary, long-term educational assignment necessitating personal initiative, undertaken byan individual student or a group of students.
5.Often, projects. housing project.
6.to propose, contemplate, or plan.
7.to throw, cast, or impel forward or onward.
8.to set forth or calculate (some future thing): They projected
the building costs for the next five years.
9.to throw or cause to fall upon a surface or into space, as aray of light or a shadow.
10.to cause (a figure or image) to appear, as on a background.
9.to throw or cause to fall upon a surface or into space, as aray of light or a shadow.
10.to cause (a figure or image) to appear, as on a background.
Origin:
1350–1400; (noun) Middle English project ( e ) design, plan <Medieval Latin prōjectum, Latin: projecting part, noun use ofneuter of Latin prōjectus, past participle of prōicere to throwforward, extend, equivalent to prō- pro-1 + -icere, combiningform of jacere to throw; (v.) late Middle English project ( e )(past participle) extended, projected < Latin prōjectus
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