Knots. a knot made by interweaving the strands at the end of a rope, often made as the beginning of a back splice or as the first stage in tying a more elaborate knot.
34.
a crownpiece.
–verb (used with object)
35.
to invest with a regal crown, or with regal dignity and power.
36.
to place a crown or garland upon the head of.
37.
to honor or reward; invest with honor, dignity, etc.
38.
to be at the top or highest part of.
39.
to complete worthily; bring to a successful or triumphant conclusion: The award crowned his career.
40.
Informal. to hit on the top of the head: She crowned her brother with a picture book.
41.
to give to (a construction) an upper surface of convex section or outline.
42.
to cap (a tooth) with a false crown.
43.
Checkers. to change (a checker) into a king after having safely reached the last row.
44.
Knots. to form a crown on (the end of a rope).
–verb (used without object)
45.
Medicine/Medical. (of a baby in childbirth) to reach a stage in delivery where the largest diameter of the fetal head is emerging from the pelvic outlet.
to take into the stomach by drawing through the throat and esophagus with a voluntary muscular action, as food, drink, or other substances.
2.
to take in so as to envelop; withdraw from sight; assimilate or absorb: He was swallowed by the crowd.
3.
to accept without question or suspicion.
4.
to accept without opposition; put up with: to swallow an insult.
5.
to accept for lack of an alternative: Consumers will have to swallow new price hikes.
6.
to suppress (emotion, a laugh, a sob, etc.) as if by drawing it down one's throat.
7.
to take back; retract: to swallow one's words.
8.
to enunciate poorly; mutter: He swallowed his words.
–verb (used without object)
9.
to perform the act of swallowing.
–noun
10.
the act or an instance of swallowing.
11.
a quantity swallowed at one time; a mouthful: Take one swallow of brandy.
12.
capacity for swallowing.
13.
Also called crown, throat.Nautical,Machinery. the space in a block, between the groove of the sheave and the shell, through which the rope runs.
Origin: bef. 1000; (v.) ME swalwen, var. of swelwen, OE swelgan; c. G schwelgen; akin to ON svelgja; (n.) ME swalwe, swolgh throat, abyss, whirlpool, OE geswelgh (see y-); akin to MLG swelch, OHG swelgo glutton, ON svelgr whirlpool, devourer
To bring to completion or successful conclusion; consummate: crowned the event with a lavish reception.
Dentistry To put a crown on (a tooth).
Games To make (a piece in checkers that has reached the last row) into a king by placing another piece upon it.
Informal To hit on the head.
v.
intr. To reach a stage in labor when a large segment of the fetal scalp is visible at the vaginal orifice. Used of a fetus.
[Middle English crowne, from Anglo-Norman coroune, from Latin corōna, wreath, garland, crown, from Greek korōnē, anything curved, kind of crown, from korōnos, curved; see sker-2 in Indo-European roots.]
tv. to hit someone on the head. : The clerk crowned the robber with a champagne bottle.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition. Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
Cite This Source
swallow
n. a puff of cigarette smoke. : He took just one swallow and started coughing.
tv. to believe or accept something. (See also eat (sth) up.) : Nobody's gonna swallow that nonsense.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition. Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
Cite This Source
Word Origin & History
crown
1111, from Anglo-Fr. coroune, from O.Fr. corone, from L. corona "crown," originally "wreath, garland," related to Gk. korone "anything curved, kind of crown." (O.E. used corona, directly from L.) Extended to coins bearing the imprint of a crown (1430), especially the British silver 5-shilling piece. Also monetary units in Iceland, Sweden (krona), Norway, Denmark (krone), and formerly in Ger. Empire and Austria-Hungary (krone). Meaning "top of the skull" is from c.1300. The verb is from c.1175. Crown-prince is 1791, a translation of Ger. kronprinz.
swallow (n.)
"migratory bird" (family Hirundinidae), O.E. swealwe, from P.Gmc. *swalwon (cf. O.S., O.N., O.Fris., Swed. svala, Dan. svale, M.Du. zwalewe, Du. zwaluw, O.H.G. swalawa, Ger. Schwalbe), from PIE *swol-wi- (cf. Rus. solowej, Slovak slavik, Pol. slowik "nightinggale"). The etymological sense is disputed. Popularly regarded as a harbinger of summer; swallows building nests on or near a house is considered good luck. First record of swallow-tail is 1545, of a type of arrowhead; of a type of coat, 1835.
Main Entry: 2crown Function: transitive verb : to put an artificial crown on (a tooth) crownintransitive senses in childbirth: to appear at the vaginal opening —used of the first part (as the crown of the head) of the infant to appear crowned>
Main Entry: 2swallow Function: noun 1: an act of swallowing 2: an amount that can be swallowed at one time