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lines
/ laɪnz /
plural noun
general appearance or outline
a car with fine lines
a plan of procedure or construction
built on traditional lines
the spoken words of a theatrical presentation
the words of a particular role
he forgot his lines
informal, a marriage certificate
marriage lines
luck, fate, or fortune (esp in the phrase hard lines )
rows of tents, buildings, temporary stabling, etc, in a military camp
transport lines
a defensive position, row of trenches, or other fortification
we broke through the enemy lines
a school punishment of writing the same sentence or phrase out a specified number of times
the phrases or sentences so written out
a hundred lines
to understand or find an implicit meaning in addition to the obvious one
Example Sentences
He went on to suggest an improvement to one of Ms. Thompson’s lines and add a little pratfall at the end, and the set brightened with laughter.
Beyond lines of cars and trucks waiting for fuel, broader effects are slowly manifesting in aggregate economic data and social media.
Jefferies expects to see higher losses across other lines of business due to the cost of AI model training and investments in feature enhancements for platforms like Amap, Alibaba’s digital navigation app.
Images widely shared on social media highlight the rowdy lines at petrol stations in Bamako, with people waiting for hours.
"I think the battle lines have been drawn publicly and everyone knows where the unions stand," says sports lawyer Ben Cisneros of Morgan Sports Law.
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