See also: rebasé

English edit

Etymology edit

re- +‎ base

Verb edit

rebase (third-person singular simple present rebases, present participle rebasing, simple past and past participle rebased)

  1. (dentistry) To replace the base of a denture.
  2. (computing) To modify core data from which other data is derived in such a way that the final meaning is unchanged.
  3. (computing, transitive) To change the base address of.
    • 2006, Raymond Chen, The Old New Thing:
      When a DLL must be loaded at an address different from its preferred address (because the preferred address is unavailable), the kernel must rebase the DLL, which consists of updating (fixing up) all addresses in the DLL so that they refer to its new location in memory.
  4. (computing, source control) To integrate changes by appending them to another commit or branch, rather than pulling or merging in changes from a branch.

Anagrams edit

Estonian edit

Noun edit

rebase

  1. genitive singular of rebane

Spanish edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /reˈbase/ [reˈβ̞a.se]
  • Rhymes: -ase
  • Syllabification: re‧ba‧se

Etymology 1 edit

Deverbal from rebasar.

Noun edit

rebase m (plural rebases)

  1. passing, overtaking (e.g. of a vehicle)

Etymology 2 edit

Verb edit

rebase

  1. inflection of rebasar:
    1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
    2. third-person singular imperative