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A Writer's Dictionary:

beaming Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with B » beaker ... beating » beaming


beam
noun
    1. A long straight thick piece of wood, used eg as a main structural component in a building.
      Thesaurus: plank, two-by-four, rafter, timber, brace, stud, strut, stay, crosspiece, support, trestle, spar, stanchion, joist.
    2. A ray or shaft of light.
      Example: the beam of a torch
      Thesaurus: streak, shaft, flicker, gleam, glare, glint, glow, emission.
    3. A broad radiant smile.
    4. The widest part of a ship or boat.
    5. One of the transverse timbers extending across the hull of a ship.
    6. A raised narrow horizontal wooden bar on which gymnasts perform balancing exercises.
    7. physics.
      A directed flow of electromagnetic radiation (eg radio or X-rays) or of particles (eg atoms or electrons).
    8. The part of a set of scales from which the weighing-pans hang.
    9. weaving.
      Either of the two wooden or metal cylinders in a loom.
    10. The main shaft of a deer's antler, or of a plough, anchor, etc.
verb beamed, beaming
    intr
    1. To smile broadly with pleasure.
      Thesaurus: smile, grin, laugh, smirk, glow, radiate.
    intr
    2. To shine.
      Thesaurus: shine, radiate, glitter, glimmer, glare, effulge.
      Form: beam down (often)
      Form: beam out
    3. To send out or transmit (eg rays of light, radio waves, etc).
      Thesaurus: send, emit, transmit, broadcast.
Derivative: beaming
adj, noun
    Idiom: beam me up, Scotty
      humorous
      Get me out of this (dangerous, awkward, embarrassing, etc) situation, quickly!
    Idiom: broad in the beam
    Idiom: off beam
      colloq
      Wrong; misguided.
    Idiom: on the beam
      colloq
      On the right track.
    Idiom: on one's beam ends
      (rit)
      colloq
      Having only a very small amount of money or resources left; dangerously close to ruin or destitution
    Idiom: on the port beam (on the starboard beam)
      On the left or right side of a ship.
    Etymology: Anglo-Saxon, meaning ‘tree'.



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