| 1. | to bend the knee or body or incline the head, as in reverence, submission, salutation, recognition, or acknowledgment. |
| 2. | to yield; submit: to bow to the inevitable. |
| 3. | to bend or curve downward; stoop: the pines bowed low. |
| 4. | to bend or incline (the knee, body, or head) in worship, submission, respect, civility, agreement, etc.: He bowed his head to the crowd. |
| 5. | to cause to submit; subdue; crush. |
| 6. | to cause to stoop or incline: Age had bowed his head. |
| 7. | to express by a bow: to bow one's thanks. |
| 8. | to usher (someone) with a bow (usually fol. by in, out, etc.): They were bowed in by the footman. |
| 9. | to cause to bend; make curved or crooked. |
| 10. | an inclination of the head or body in salutation, assent, thanks, reverence, respect, submission, etc. |
| 11. | bow out, to resign a position or withdraw from a job, competition, obligation, etc.: He bowed out after two terms as governor. |
| 12. | bow and scrape, to be excessively polite or deferential. |
| 13. | make one's bow, to appear publicly for the first time, as a performer, politician, etc.: The young pianist made her bow last night to an appreciative audience. |
| 14. | take a bow, to step forward or stand up in order to receive recognition, applause, etc.: The conductor had the soloists take a bow. |

| 1. | a flexible strip of wood or other material, bent by a string stretched between its ends, for shooting arrows: He drew the bow and sent the arrow to its target. |
| 2. | an instrument resembling this, used for various purposes, as rotating a drill or spindle, or loosening entangled or matted fibers. |
| 3. | a bend or curve. |
| 4. | Also called bowknot. a looped knot composed of two or more loops and two ends, as for tying together the ends of a ribbon or string. |
| 5. | any separate piece of looped, knotted, or shaped gathering of ribbon, cloth, paper, etc., used as a decoration, as on a package, dress, or the like. |
| 6. | a long rod, originally curved but now nearly straight, with horsehairs stretched from one end to the other, used for playing on a musical instrument of the violin and viol families. |
| 7. | a single movement of such a device over the strings of a violin, viol, or the like. |
| 8. | bow tie. |
| 9. | something curved or arc-shaped. |
| 10. | a saddlebow. |
| 11. | an archer; bowman: He is the best bow in the county. |
| 12. | temple 2 (def. 3). |
| 13. | a U-shaped piece for placing under an animal's neck to hold a yoke. |
| 14. | Building Trades. a flexible rod used for laying out large curves. |
| 15. | the part of a key grasped by the fingers. |
| 16. | the loop on the stem of a watch by which the watch is attached to a chain or the like. |
| 17. | a rainbow. |
| 18. | curved outward at the center; bent: bow legs. |
| 19. | to bend into the form of a bow; curve. |
| 20. | Music. to perform by means of a bow upon a stringed instrument. |
| 21. | Textiles Obsolete. to loosen by passing a vibrating bow among entangled fibers. |
| 1. | Nautical, Aeronautics.
|
| 2. | bows, Nautical. the exterior of the forward end of a vessel, esp. one in which the hull slopes back on both sides of the stem. |
| 3. | the foremost oar in rowing a boat. |
| 4. | Also called bowman, bow oar. the person who pulls that oar. |
| 5. | of or pertaining to the bow of a ship. |
| 6. | bows on, (of a ship) with the bow foremost: The vessel approached us bows on. |
| 7. | bows under, (of a ship) shipping water at the bow: The ship was bows under during most of the storm. |
| 8. | on the bow, Nautical. within 45° to the heading of the vessel. |
bow 2 (bou) v. bowed, bow·ing, bows v. intr.
Phrasal Verb(s): bow outTo remove oneself; withdraw. Idiom(s): bow and scrapeTo behave obsequiously. [Middle English bowen, from Old English būgan; see bheug- in Indo-European roots.] |
Bow
The bow was in use in early times both in war and in the chase (Gen. 21:20; 27:3; 48:22). The tribe of Benjamin were famous for the use of the bow (1 Chr. 8:40; 12:2; 2 Chr. 14:8; 17:17); so also were the Elamites (Isa. 22:6) and the Lydians (Jer. 46:9). The Hebrew word commonly used for bow means properly to tread (1 Chr. 5:18; 8:40), and hence it is concluded that the foot was employed in bending the bow. Bows of steel (correctly "copper") are mentioned (2 Sam. 22:35; Ps. 18:34). The arrows were carried in a quiver (Gen. 27:3; Isa. 22:6; 49:2; Ps. 127:5). They were apparently sometimes shot with some burning material attached to them (Ps. 120:4). The bow is a symbol of victory (Ps. 7:12). It denotes also falsehood, deceit (Ps. 64:3, 4; Hos. 7:16; Jer. 9:3). "The use of the bow" in 2 Sam. 1:18 (A.V.) ought to be "the song of the bow," as in the Revised Version.
bow
In addition to the idioms beginning with bow, also see take a bow; two strings to one's bow.
| BOW bag of waters (the amniotic sac in pregnancy) |