lining Definition
line1
noun
- 1. A long narrow mark, streak or stripe.
2. A length of thread, rope, wire, etc used for specified purposes.
- Example: a washing line
- Example: mending the telephone lines
4. math.
- Something that has length but no breadth or thickness.
6. A row.
- Thesaurus: rank, file, row, sequence.
- Example: a line from Shakespeare
- Form: lines
- Example: a car of stylish lines
- Form: lines (often)
- Form: lines
- Any one of the five horizontal marks forming a musical stave.
- A series of notes forming a melody.
- A short letter or note.
- Example: drop him a line
- Example: from a long line of doctors
- Thesaurus: lineage, family, descent, ancestry, race, stock, strain, breed, bloodline, pedigree.
- Example: his line of business
- Example: think along different lines
- Example: overstep the line
- Example: a new line in tonic water
(N Amer, especially US)
20. A physical boundary. Compare limit.
- Example: the county line
- Example: a thin line between genius and madness
- Example: goal line
24. A branch or route of a railway system.
25. A route, track or direction of movement.
- Example: line of fire
27a. A telephone connection
- Example: trying to get a line to Aberdeen;
28. A company running regular services of ships, buses or aircraft between two or more places.
29. An arrangement of troops or ships side by side and ready to fight.
30. A connected series of military defences.
- Example: behind enemy lines
- Form: lines (always)
32. One of several narrow horizontal bands forming a television picture.
33. The equator.
- Form: the Line (often)
34. A queue.
35. drug-taking slang
- A small amount of powdered drugs, usually cocaine, arranged in a narrow channel, ready to be sniffed.
- A remark, usually insincere, that someone uses in the hope of getting some kind of benefit.
- Example: He spun her a line
37. A short note written by someone in authority.
- Example: The doctor's line covered her absence
38. A licence or certificate, eg of marriage or of church membership.
- Form: lines
- 1. To mark or cover something with lines. See also white line.
2. To form a line along something.
- Example: Crowds lined the streets
- At every point.
- To be the kind of thing someone is comfortable with.
- Example: Dealing with children is not in her line
- To make them or it conform.
- Said of the action of a ball, shot or player: very close to the edge of the court or pitch.
- colloq
In the future.
- See under draw.
- colloq
The point at which it is useless or impossible to carry on.
- colloq
To get information about them or it.
- colloq
Bad luck!
- Likely to get it.
- Example: in line for promotion
- In a line of succession.
- Example: second in line to the boss
- In agreement or harmony with them or it.
- To speak frankly.
- To risk one's reputation or career over something.
- Sticking loosely to a specified way of doing it.
- colloq
Approximately correct.
- Not aligned.
- Impudent.
- Exhibiting unacceptable behaviour.
- To understand something which is not actually stated.
- See under step.
Phrasal Verb: line people or things up
- To form them into a line.To align them.
- To organize it.
- Example: lined herself up a new job
- To form a line.To make a stand, eg in support of or against something. See line-up.
line2
verb
- 1. To cover the inside of (clothes, boxes, curtains, etc) with some other material.
- Thesaurus: fill, reinforce, strengthen, panel, overlay, sheathe.
- Example: line the walls with books
- To fill, especially with large amounts.
- The action of inserting a lining into something.
- Thesaurus: backing, inlay, interfacing, padding, encasement.
- The material used for lining something.
- To make a profit, especially by dishonest means.
lining line2
