To treat as trash, or worthless matter; hence, to spurn, humiliate, or crush.
A temporary storage container where you can move any files or folders you no longer need. These items will remain in the Trash and can be retrieved later if you need to recover an item. Once you empty the trash from the Finder menu, however, these files are gone forever.
An icon on the desktop where files can be deleted. See also special menu.
Dry waste material, such as boxes and cans. image
Material to be thrown away. Solid waste.
Garbage that used to be deposited in trash cans or receptacles that were emptied over the fantail underway or taken to the pier if in port.
waste material that cannot be recycled and reused (synonymous with garbage).
material that is considered worthless, unnecessary that is usually thrown away..... return
rubbish, waste material, garbage ..... return
Worthless or discarded material or objects; refuse.
worthless material that is to be disposed of
Where you put files to delete them. This isn't always irreversible, the Trash may be opened like any other icon. Any items still in the Trash may be moved to another location, thus undeleting them. See below in the Operating Basics section for more information on the Trash. To delete a file, drag its icon into the Trash, and select Special-Empty Trash under the Finders menu.
Material considered worthless, unnecessary or offensive that is usually thrown away. Garbage.
Unnaturally occurring, man-made refuse or discarded substances. Openly discarded trash and petroleum wastes may be carried into waters of the state by storm runoff and is unsightly.
Material considered worthless or offensive that is thrown away. Generally defined as dry waste material, but in common usage it is a synonym for garbage, rubbish, or refuse.
A icon on the desktop that you use to discard applications, documents, and folders.
The icon located on the desktop where files and folders are placed before deleting.
1. n. uncouth citizenry 2. v. to deprecate, often verbally (as in trash-talk); 3. v. to inebriate or otherwise destroy, as in "This place is trashed"; 4. v. to delete a file, especially on the Macintosh, by dragging it to the Trach can icon usually located in the lower right of the desktop, as in "Try trashing your preferences file"; 5. n. the Trash can icon itself. In one of the worst decisions in the Macintosh interface, dragging a file to the trash will delete the file, but dragging a disk to the trsh will dismount or eject the disk.