blade
Americannoun
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the flat cutting part of a sword, knife, etc.
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a sword, rapier, or the like.
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a part of a tool or mechanism which is thin and flat with a tapered edge, used for clearing, wiping, scraping, etc..
the blade of a windshield wiper;
the blade of a bulldozer.
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the arm of a propeller or other similar rotary mechanism, as an electric fan or turbine.
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Botany.
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the leaf of a plant, especially of a grass or cereal.
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the broad part of a leaf, as distinguished from the stalk or petiole.
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the metal part of an ice skate that comes into contact with the ice.
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a thin, flat part of something, as of an oar or a bone.
shoulder blade.
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a prosthetic lower leg, primarily for athletes, ending in a curved strip of flexible carbon fiber that acts as an ankle and foot, allowing running and jumping.
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Phonetics.
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the foremost and most readily flexible portion of the tongue, including the tip and implying the upper and lower surfaces and edges.
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the upper surface of the tongue directly behind the tip, lying beneath the alveolar ridge when the tongue is in a resting position.
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the elongated hind part of a fowl's single comb.
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a swordsman.
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Archaic. a dashing, swaggering, or jaunty young man.
a gay blade from the nearby city.
noun
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the part of a sharp weapon, tool, etc, that forms the cutting edge
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(plural) hand shears used for shearing sheep
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the thin flattish part of various tools, implements, etc, as of a propeller, turbine, etc
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the flattened expanded part of a leaf, sepal, or petal
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the long narrow leaf of a grass or related plant
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the striking surface of a bat, club, stick, or oar
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the metal runner on an ice skate
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archaeol a long thin flake of flint, possibly used as a tool
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the upper part of the tongue lying directly behind the tip
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archaic a dashing or swaggering young man
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short for shoulder blade
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The expanded part of a leaf or petal.
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The leaf of grasses and similar plants.
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A stone tool consisting of a slender, sharp-edged, unserrated flake that is at least twice as long as it is wide. Blade tools were developed late in the stone tool tradition, after core and flake tools, and were probably used especially as knives.
Other Word Forms
- bladed adjective
- bladeless adjective
- multiblade noun
- unblade verb (used with object)
Etymology
Origin of blade
First recorded before 1000; Middle English blad(e), blaid “leaf, blade (of a plant or sword)”; Old English blæd “blade (of grass or an oar)”; cognate with Dutch blad, Old Norse blath, German Blatt; akin to blow 3
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
The team believes the new printable aluminum could lead to stronger, lighter, and more heat-resistant components, including fan blades for jet engines.
From Science Daily
Operating daily since then, it has captured more than 30 hours of audio from the planet, including wind gusts, the spinning blades of the Ingenuity helicopter, and now the sounds linked to electric discharges.
From Science Daily
I needed help creating authentic 1939 fuel lines and fan blades.
Best among them is the picture of a woman who tugs on a goat’s hooves, the animal largely out of frame, struggling against its weight as she grips a blade between her teeth.
The plow is “a child of the north / like Romanticism,” its blade pushing “at its superb angle . . . everything before it, / old snow with the new, garbage and beer cans.”
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.