3. (noun)deoxyguanosine monophosphate, G one of the four nucleotides used in building DNA; all four nucleotides have a common phosphate group and a sugar (ribose)
4. (noun)thousand, one thousand, 1000, M, K, chiliad, G, grand, thou, yard the cardinal number that is the product of 10 and 100
5. (noun)g, gee, g-force a unit of force equal to the force exerted by gravity; used to indicate the force to which a body is subjected when it is accelerated
6. (noun)gigabyte, G, GB a unit of information equal to 1000 megabytes or 10^9 (1,000,000,000) bytes
7. (noun)gigabyte, gibibyte, G, GB, GiB a unit of information equal to 1024 mebibytes or 2^30 (1,073,741,824) bytes
8. (noun)gravitational constant, universal gravitational constant, constant of gravitation, G (physics) the universalconstant relating force to mass and distance in Newton's law of gravitation
1. g g is the seventhletter of the English alphabet, and a vocalconsonant. It has two sounds; one simple, as in gave, go, gull; the other compound (like that of j), as in gem, gin, dingy. See Guide to Pronunciation, // 231-6, 155, 176, 178, 179, 196, 211, 246
2. g g is the name of the fifthtone of the natural or model scale; -- called also sol by the Italians and French. It was also originally used as the treble clef, and has gradually changed into the character represented in the margin. See Clef. G/ (G sharp) is a tone intermediate between G and A
2. The letter G has special significance in the hacker community,
largely thanks to the GNU project and the GPL.
Many free software projects havenames that
names that begin with G. The GNU project gave many of its projects names
that were acronyms beginning with the word “GNU”, such as
“GNU C Compiler” (gcc) and “GNU Debugger” (gdb),
and this launched a tradition. Just as many Java developers will begin
their projects with J, many freesoftware developers willbegin theirs with
G. It is often the case that a program with a G-prefixed name is licensed
under the GNU GPL.