Noun
PINS (plural PINS)
(US) Acronym of person in need of supervision (“a juvenile not currently living with a parent or guardian”).
Abbey also took time out to pose on her own in a split thigh green gown showing off her perfect pins. Source: Internet
24-pin printers By the mid-1980s, manufacturers had increased the pincount of the impact printhead from 7, 8, 9 or 12 pins to 18, 24, 27 or 48, with 24 pins being most common. Source: Internet
A bed for the bars is made by laying four wooden rails onto pins on the end blocks. Source: Internet
A color-coded wiring arrangement is wrapped around pins and connectors on a circuit board. Source: Internet
Address storage and computation uses 32 bits internally; however, the 8 high-order address bits are ignored due to the physical lack of device pins. Source: Internet
All of the other pins of the device perform the same function as they do with the 8086 with two exceptions. Source: Internet