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tow
1[ toh ]
verb (used with object)
- to pull or haul (a car, barge, trailer, etc.) by a rope, chain, or other device:
The car was towed to the service station.
noun
- an act or instance of towing.
- something being towed.
- something, as a boat or truck, that tows.
- a rope, chain, metal bar, or other device for towing:
The trailer is secured to the car by a metal tow.
tow
2[ toh ]
noun
- the fiber of flax, hemp, or jute prepared for spinning by beating.
- the shorter, less desirable flax fibers separated from line fibers in combing.
- synthetic filaments prior to spinning.
adjective
- made of tow.
tow
3[ toh ]
noun
- a rope.
TOW
4[ toh ]
noun
- a U.S. Army antitank missile, steered to its target by two thin wires connected to a computerized launcher, which is mounted on a vehicle or helicopter.
tow
1/ təʊ /
verb
- tr to pull or drag (a vehicle, boat, etc), esp by means of a rope or cable
noun
- the act or an instance of towing
- the state of being towed (esp in the phrases in tow, under tow, on tow )
- something towed
- something used for towing
- in towin one's charge or under one's influence
- informal.(in motor racing, etc) the act of taking advantage of the slipstream of another car (esp in the phrase get a tow )
- short for ski tow
tow
2/ təʊ /
noun
- the fibres of hemp, flax, jute, etc, in the scutched state
- synthetic fibres preparatory to spinning
- the coarser fibres discarded after combing
Derived Forms
- ˈtowable, adjective
- ˈtowy, adjective
Other Words From
- towa·ble adjective
- towa·bili·ty noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of tow1
Origin of tow2
Origin of tow3
Origin of tow4
Word History and Origins
Origin of tow1
Origin of tow2
Idioms and Phrases
- in tow,
- in the state of being towed.
- under one's guidance; in one's charge.
- as a follower, admirer, or companion:
a professor who always had a graduate student in tow.
- under tow, in the condition of being towed; in tow.
More idioms and phrases containing tow
see in tow .Example Sentences
At 10:35 on Saturday 9 September Khalife was riding a stolen bike on a canal tow path in Northolt, north-west London, when he was arrested by a counter-terrorism detective in plain clothes.
A speeding Dodge Ram had run a red light, broadsided a Honda Accord and caused it to hit a tow truck, police said.
Basin began with a modest rope tow in 1939, according to the resort website.
I know people who are making plans to leave for their home countries, U.S.-born children in tow, by Inauguration Day.
Officials said the driver of the tow truck was not injured.
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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.
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