From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdirectorydi‧rec‧to‧ry /daɪˈrektəri, də-/ ●●○ S3 noun (plural directories) [countable] 1 TCNa book or list of names, facts etc, usually arranged in alphabetical order I couldn’t find your number in the telephone directory. a new business directory2 a place in a computer where files or programs are organized
Examples from the Corpus
directory• a directory of city tours• The Explorer view is one of two ways in which you can look at directories and files via the My Computer icon.• If the program is not in the current directory, its full device, path and file name must be specified.• She added that all rooms contained details about the charges in an information directory.• In a perfect world, there would be a single universal e-mail directory.• Sam's number should be listed in the telephone directory.• His name was the first to come to her mind and his telephone number was in the directory.• If specified, the directory must exist and the user must have at least read and write access to it.From Longman Business Dictionarydirectorydi‧rec‧to‧ry /daɪˈrektəri, də-/ noun (plural directories) [countable]1a book or list of names, facts etc, usually arranged in alphabetical orderI couldn’t find your number in the telephone directory.a new business directorythe Classified Directory of Wisconsin Manufacturers → see also ex-directory2COMPUTING part of a computer’s memory where information is stored, containing one or more FILEsI suggest you create a separate directory to keep these files in.