English edit

Etymology edit

From on- +‎ load.

Verb edit

onload (third-person singular simple present onloads, present participle onloading, simple past and past participle onloaded)

  1. (transitive) To load onto or upon.
    • 1993, Douglas Menarchik, Powerlift--getting to Desert Storm:
      Also, the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) from Ft. Campbell, Kentucky, was to onload at Jacksonville, Florida. On August 11, Military Traffic Management Command expanded operations by activating a team for sea terminal operations at Jacksonville, Florida.
    • 2001, The Praetorian STARShip : the untold story of the Combat Talon:
      Webb taxied to the FARP site, refueled, and then onloaded General Canavan and additional personnel for a re- turn flight to Monrovia.
    • 2004-2008, Illustrated Guide to Ocean Freight Containers:
      Ship to Shore Cranes Ship to shore container cranes are giant industrial cranes designed to onload and offload ocean freight containers from ocean vessels to dock side port facilities.
    • 2014, Dieter an Mey, Michael Alexander, Bientinesi Paolo, Euro-Par 2013:
      The interface to onload tasks is similar to that of workqueues but semantically richer and designed for parallel operations.

Antonyms edit

Noun edit

onload (plural onloads)

  1. That which is onloaded.
    • 1999, North Eastern Reporter - second series - volume 715, page 32:
      By reducing the transaction costs of Indiana onloads and offloads of cargo relative to out-of-state onloads and offloads of cargo, the in Indiana exemption makes the petitioners more likely to make onloads and offloads of cargo for their Indiana customers.

Anagrams edit