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lateral
6 dictionary results for: Lateral
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) - Cite This Source - Share This
lat·er·al       [lat-er-uhl] Pronunciation Key
–adjective
1.of or pertaining to the side; situated at, proceeding from, or directed to a side: a lateral view.
2.pertaining to or entailing a position, office, etc., that is different but equivalent or roughly equivalent in status, as distinguished from a promotion or demotion: a lateral move.
3.Phonetics. articulated so that the breath passes on either or both sides of the tongue, as l.
–noun
4.a lateral part or extension, as a branch or shoot.
5.Mining. a small drift off to the side of a principal one.
6.Phonetics. a lateral speech sound.
7.Football. lateral pass.
–verb (used without object)
8.Football. to throw a lateral pass.
9.to move laterally or sideways: migrating birds lateraling down into Cape May.
–verb (used with object)
10.Football. to throw (the ball) in a lateral pass.

[Origin: 1590–1600; < L laterālis of the side, equiv. to later- (s. of latus) side + -ālis -al1]

lat·er·al·ly, adverb
American Heritage Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This
lat·er·al       (lāt'ər-əl)  Pronunciation Key 
adj.  
  1. Of, relating to, or situated at or on the side.
  2. Of or constituting a change within an organization or a hierarchy to a position at a similar level, as in salary or responsibility, to the one being left: made a lateral move within the company.
  3. Linguistics Of, relating to, or being a sound produced by breath passing along one or both sides of the tongue.

n.  
  1. A lateral part, projection, passage, or appendage.
  2. Football A lateral pass.
  3. Linguistics A lateral sound, such as (l).

v.   lat·er·aled also lat·er·alled, lat·er·al·ing also lat·er·al·ling, lat·er·als also lat·er·als Football

v.   intr.
To execute a lateral pass.

v.   tr.
To pass (the ball) sideways or backward.


[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin laterālis, from latus, later-, side.]

lat'er·al·ly adv.
Online Etymology Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This
lateral 
1561 (implied in laterally), from L. lateralis "belonging to the side," from latus (gen. lateris) "side" (see oblate (n.)). As a type of pass to the side in U.S. football, it is attested from 1934.

WordNet - Cite This Source - Share This
lateral

adjective
1. situated at or extending to the side; "the lateral branches of a tree"; "shot out sidelong boughs"- Tennyson 
2. lying away from the median and sagittal plane of a body; "lateral lemniscus" 

noun
1. a pass to a receiver upfield from the passer [syn: lateral pass

American Heritage Stedman's Medical Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This

lateral lat·er·al (lāt'ər-əl)
adj.

  1. Relating to or situated at or on the side.
  2. Situated or extending away from the median plane of the body.
  3. Relating to the left or right lateral region of the abdomen.
n.
A lateral part, position, or appendage.
lat'er·al·ly adv.

Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This

Lateral

Lat"er*al\, a. [L. lateralis, fr. latus, lateris, side: cf. F. lat['e]ral.]

1. Of or pertaining to the sides; as, the lateral walls of a house; the lateral branches of a tree.

2. (Anat.) Lying at, or extending toward, the side; away from the mesial plane; external; -- opposed to mesial.

3. Directed to the side; as, a lateral view of a thing.

Lateral cleavage (Crystallog.), cleavage parallel to the lateral planes.

Lateral equation (Math.), an equation of the first degree. [Obs.]

Lateral line (Anat.), in fishes, a line of sensory organs along either side of the body, often marked by a distinct line of color.

Lateral pressure or stress (Mech.), a pressure or stress at right angles to the length, as of a beam or bridge; -- distinguished from longitudinal pressure or stress.

Lateral strength (Mech.), strength which resists a tendency to fracture arising from lateral pressure.

Lateral system (Bridge Building), the system of horizontal braces (as between two vertical trusses) by which lateral stiffness is secured.

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