|
|
| |
|
|
 |
| |
Link
- If you need help with wiki links, see: Wikipedia:How to edit a page.
The term link can refer to:
- A connection between two objects, or an element of a chain.
- A sausage from a chain of connected sausages.
- A hyperlink.
- A connection between two components of a network.
- A union of separated mathematical knots, possibly tangled together.
- A link, linking col or key col in mountain topography.
- The verb "to link, which in computer science means to assemble object files and libraries into an executable file or library.
- A symbolic link or hard link to a computer file, associating a filename with another file or a file's data.
- A U.S. customary unit of length equal to one hundredth of a chain.
- Link, a video game character in the Legend of Zelda series by Nintendo.
- Edwin Albert Link, aviation pioneer.
- Johann Heinrich Friedrich Link, German botanist.
- William Roy "Link" Lyman, a professional football player.
- Liberation in North Korea, a human rights advocacy group.
- The Link, a short-lived British organization founded in 1937 "to promote Anglo-German friendship".
- The Link REIT, a real estate investment trust established by the Hong Kong Housing Authority to privatize shopping malls and carparks.
- Hong Kong Link, a holding company for toll tunnels and bridges wholly owned by the Government of Hong Kong.
- Link , a minor character in the Matrix series.
- Link, a 1986 horror movie featuring an orang-utan of that name
See also
- A link is often referred to as one object of several identical objects "linked" together.
Ex. "A chain is as strong as its weakest link"
- A link can be an idea, a concept, a thing, a person, and/or a place, that joins together orlinks, two or more, like or unlike, tangible and/or intangible objects.
Ex. "Joe's publicity agency in Phoenix served as the link between the magazine in New York and the movie star in Los Angeles."
References
|
|
|
|