English Dictionary
◊ CLOTHES PEG
rile
v 1: cause annoyance in; disturb, esp. by minor irritations:
"Mosquitoes buzzing in my ear really bothers me"; "It
irritates me that she never closes the door after she
leaves" [syn: {annoy}, {rag}, {get to}, {bother}, {get
at}, {irritate}, {nark}, {nettle}, {gravel}, {vex}, {devil}]
2: make turbid by stirring up the sediments of [syn: {roil}]
 rigout  riksmal  rile  riled  rilievo 
English Computing Dictionary
◊ FILE
file
An element of data storage in a {file system}.
The history of computing is rich in varied kinds of files and
{file systems}, whether ornate (e.g., {Macintosh file system}
for a well-known case) or deficient (e.g., many simple
pre-1980s file systems don't allow {directories}).
However, the prototypical file has these characteristics:
▫ It is a single sequence of bytes (but consider {Macintosh}
{resource forks}).
▫ It has a finite length, unlike, e.g. a {Unix} {device}.
▫ It is stored in a {non-volatile storage} medium (but see
{ramdrive}).
▫ It exists (nominally) in a {directory}.
▫ It has a name that it can be referred to by in file
operations, possibly in combination with its {path}.
Additionally, a file system may associate other information
with a file, such as {permission} bits or other {file
attributes}; timestamps for file creation, last revision, and
last access; revision numbers (a` la VMS), and other kinds of
{magic}.
(1997-04-08)