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The word lock came from Anglo-Saxon loca = "a secure enclosure".
The term lock may refer to:
- lock (device), a mechanical device used to fasten a door for example.
- lock (firearm), the ignition mechanism used on early projectile weapons
- canal lock, an enclosure in a canal used to raise or lower the water level for ships passing through
- lock (computer science), a bookkeeping object associated with a piece of data that is used to serialize concurrent access
- Lock (Saga of the Skolian empire), a sentient machine in the novels by Catherine Asaro
- Goldilocks, and the three bears
- A tuft or small bundle of hair.
- A wrestling hold, such as a head lock.
- One of the rugby union positions or rugby league positions
- Lock occurs when the output data and clock signals match those of an input signal transmitted and sent through a bit synchronizer, a device that establishes a series of clock pulses which are synchronous to the incoming signal.
- Lock when used in the context of spacecraft can mean a positional fix on another object, or it can mean lock on telemetry data.
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