| objective |
1) The protagonist's need, his overall yearning, or the quality he lacks or wants in life. This is also referred to as his dramatic need. 2) The overall task the protagonist must achieve to accomplish his need during the film. The protagonist's objective is to vanquish the bad guy or solve the problem. An objective is something like "go back home," "find a wife," "bring back the Holy Grail," or "Bring the criminals to justice."
Ãâó: www.dsiegel.com/film/glossary.html
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| objective |
The lower lenses on a microscope or stereoscope. The objectives are fitted into the nosepiece, and most scopes have more than one. On stereoscopes, there is a matched pair of objectives (ie, you are looking through two eyepieces, and two objectives), whereas on a microscope there is a just single objective in use at any time (regardless of the number of eyepieces).
Ãâó: www.greatscopes.com/glossary.htm
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| objective |
a focus and overall framework or purpose for a project or other endeavor, which may be further defined by one or more goals (see definition above).
Ãâó: www.water.ncsu.edu/watershedss/info/rcwp/gloss.htm...
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| objective |
refers to what the project aims to achieve at each level of the Logframe hierarchy from the output up to the goal level. One can therefore refer to goal, purpose, component or output level objectives.
Ãâó: www.aadcp.org/keyterms.html
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| objective |
A concrete statement describing what the project is trying to achieve. The objective should be written at a low level so that it can be evaluated at the conclusion of a project to see whether it was achieved or not. A well-worded objective will be Specific, Measurable, Attainable/Achievable, Realistic and Timebound (SMART). See 320.3.1 Goals and Objectives for more information.
Ãâó: www.portfoliostep.com/390.1TerminologyDefinitions....
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