Analytical engine
The term Analytical engine refers to any sign, symbol or glyph (nonfiction) used in a scrying engine.
It derives from the obsolete military-computational term analytical enseign.
Etymology:
ensign (noun): early 15c., "a token, sign, symbol; badge of office, mark or insignia of authority or rank;" also "battle flag, flag or banner of a ship or troop of soldiers," via Scottish, from Old French enseigne (12c.) "mark, symbol, signal; flag, standard, pennant," from Latin insignia (plural); see insignia, which is a doublet of this word. As the word for the soldier who carries the flag, 1510s. U.S. Navy sense of "commissioned officer of the lowest rank" is from 1862. French navy had rank of enseigne de vaisseau since at least early 18c. Until 1871 one of the lowest grades of commissioned officers in a British army infantry regiment, also a rank in the American Revolutionary army.
In the News
Nonfiction cross-reference
- Analytical Engine (nonfiction)
- Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)
- Charles Babbage (nonfiction)
- Glyph (nonfiction)
- Robinson Crusoe (nonfiction)