to have a visitor
1Visitor management — refers to tracking the usage of a public building or site. By gathering increasing amounts of information, a visitor management system can record the usage of the facilities by specific visitors and provide documentation of visitor’s whereabouts …
2visitor — visitor, visitant, guest, caller mean one who visits another or comes to pay a visit. Visitor is the general word applicable to anyone who comes under this description {there are visitors in the drawing room} {summer visitors} but it is… …
3Visitor Q — Infobox Film name = Visitor Q director = Takashi Miike writer = Itaru Era starring = Kenichi Endo Shungicu Uchida Kazushi Watanabe cinematographer = Hideo Yamamoto editing = Yasushi Shimamura music = Kōji Endō distributor = CineRocket released =… …
4Visitor pattern — [ LePUS3 ( [http://lepus.org.uk/ref/legend/legend.xml legend] ) ] In object oriented programming and software engineering, the visitor design pattern is a way of separating an algorithm from an object structure upon which it operates. A practical …
5Visitor — For the Catholic equivalent, see Canonical visitation, and for other uses, see Visitor (disambiguation) A Visitor, in United Kingdom law and history, is an overseer of an autonomous ecclesiastical or eleemosynary institution (i.e., a charitable… …
6visitor */*/*/ — UK [ˈvɪzɪtə(r)] / US [ˈvɪzɪtər] noun [countable] Word forms visitor : singular visitor plural visitors 1) someone who visits a place or a person The National Parks are attracting more visitors than ever. Did you have any visitors today? visitor… …
7visitor — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ frequent, regular ▪ occasional ▪ seasonal ▪ rare ▪ casual ▪ …
8have a little visitor — tv. to have received the menses. (Have got can replace have.) □ Mary said she has a little visitor. □ She has a little visitor and will call you later …
9have — [c]/hæv / (say hav) verb (present singular 1 have, 2 have or, Archaic, hast has or, Archaic, hath, plural have …
10have an axe to grind — Meaning Have an ulterior motive. Origin Benjamin Franklin wrote that a visitor asked him how his grindstone worked. Franklin sharpened the visitor s axe for him when demonstrating, which is apparently what was intended all along …