**Life Architect** ====== life ====== /līf/ **noun**: life **plural noun**: lives **noun**: one's life **plural noun**: one's lifes - the condition that distinguishes animals and plants from inorganic matter, including the capacity for growth, reproduction, functional activity, and continual change preceding death.\\ - the existence of an individual human being or animal. * a particular type or aspect of people's existence. * a biography. * either of the two states of a person's existence separated by death (as in Christianity and some other religious traditions). * any of a number of successive existences in which a soul is held to be reincarnated (as in Hinduism and some other religious traditions). * a chance to live after narrowly escaping death (with reference to the nine lives traditionally attributed to cats). - the period between the birth and death of a living thing, especially a human being. * the period during which something inanimate or abstract continues to exist, function, or be valid. * **INFORMAL**\\ a sentence of imprisonment for life - vitality, vigor, or energy. - (in art) the depiction of a subject from a real model, rather than from an artist's imagination. ==== Origin ==== Old English līf, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch lijf, German Leib ‘body’, also to live1. {{:life.png?nolink | Origin}} ====== ar·chi·tect ====== /ˈärkəˌtek(t)/ **noun**: architect **plural noun**: architects - a person who is qualified to design buildings and to plan and supervise their construction. * a person who is responsible for inventing or realizing a particular idea or project. - Computing * a person who designs hardware, software, or networking applications and services of a specified type for a business or other organization **verb**: Computing **verb**: architect **3rd person present**: architects **past tense**: architected **past participle**: architected **gerund or present participle**: architecting design and configure (a program or system). ==== Origin ==== mid 16th century: from French architecte, from Italian architetto, via Latin from Greek arkhitektōn, from arkhi- ‘chief’ + tektōn ‘builder’.