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Splay - 6 dictionary results

splay

[spley]
–verb (used with object)
1. to spread out, expand, or extend.
2. to form with an oblique angle; make slanting; bevel.
3. to make with a splay or splays.
4. to disjoin; dislocate.
–verb (used without object)
5. to have an oblique or slanting direction.
6. to spread or flare.
–noun
7. Architecture. a surface that makes an oblique angle with another, as where the opening through a wall for a window or door widens from the window or door proper toward the face of the wall.
–adjective
8. spread out; wide and flat; turned outward.
9. clumsy or awkward.
10. oblique or awry.

Origin:
1300–50; ME; aph. form of display
splay   (splā)   
adj.  
  1. Spread or turned out.
  2. Clumsy or clumsily formed; awkward.
n.   Architecture
An oblique angle or bevel given to the sides of an opening in a wall so that the opening is wider on one side of the wall than on the other.
v.   splayed, splay·ing, splays

v.   tr.
  1. To spread (the limbs, for example) out or apart, especially clumsily.
  2. To make slanting or sloping; bevel.
  3. To dislocate (a bone). Used of an animal.
v.   intr.
  1. To be spread out or apart.
  2. To slant or slope.

[From Middle English splayen, to spread out, short for displayen; see display.]

Splay

Splay\, v. t. [Abbrev. of display.]

1. To display; to spread. [Obs.] "Our ensigns splayed." --Gascoigne.

2. To dislocate, as a shoulder bone.

3. To spay; to castrate. [Obs. or Prov. Eng.]

4. To turn on one side; to render oblique; to slope or slant, as the side of a door, window, etc. --Oxf. Gloss.

Splay

Splay\, a. Displayed; spread out; turned outward; hence, flat; ungainly; as, splay shoulders.

Sonwthing splay, something blunt-edged, unhandy, and infelicitous. --M. Arnold.

Splay

Splay\, a. (Arch.) A slope or bevel, especially of the sides of a door or window, by which the opening is made larged at one face of the wall than at the other, or larger at each of the faces than it is between them.

splay  (v.)
"to spread out," c.1330, shortened form of desplayen (see display). Pp. adj. splayed "spread out" is attested from c.1547.
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