joint]
| 1. | the place at which two things, or separate parts of one thing, are joined or united, either rigidly or in such a way as to permit motion; juncture. |
| 2. | a connection between pieces of wood, metal, or the like, often reinforced with nails, screws, or glue. |
| 3. | Anatomy, Zoology.
|
| 4. | one of the large portions into which a section of meat is divided by a butcher, as the shoulder or leg, esp. as served at table. |
| 5. | Slang. a marijuana cigarette. |
| 6. | Slang.
|
| 7. | Biology.
|
| 8. | Botany. the part of a stem from which a branch or leaf grows; node. |
| 9. | Geology. a fracture plane in rocks, generally at right angles to the bedding of sedimentary rocks and variously oriented in igneous and metamorphic rocks, commonly arranged in two or more sets of parallel intersecting systems. |
| 10. | Mathematics. knot (def. 12). |
| 11. | the joint, Slang. prison: He got out of the joint just before Christmas. |
| 12. | Slang: Vulgar. penis. |
| 13. | shared by or common to two or more: a joint obligation. |
| 14. | undertaken or produced by two or more in conjunction or in common: a joint reply; a joint effort. |
| 15. | sharing or acting in common: joint members of a committee. |
| 16. | joined or associated, as in relation, interest, or action: joint owners. |
| 17. | Law. joined together in obligation or ownership: joint heirs. |
| 18. | of or pertaining to both branches of a bicameral legislature. |
| 19. | pertaining to or noting diplomatic action in which two or more governments are formally united. |
| 20. | to unite by a joint or joints. |
| 21. | to form or provide with a joint or joints. |
| 22. | to cut (a fowl, piece of meat, etc.) at the joint; divide at a joint; separate into pieces at the joints: to joint a chicken. |
| 23. | Carpentry.
|
| 24. | to file the teeth of (a saw) to uniform height. |
| 25. | Masonry. to finish (a mortar joint), as by striking. |
| 26. | to fit together by or as if by joints: The cinder blocks jointed neatly. |
| 27. | out of joint,
|

noun, verb, knot⋅ted, knot⋅ting.| 1. | an interlacing, twining, looping, etc., of a cord, rope, or the like, drawn tight into a knob or lump, for fastening, binding, or connecting two cords together or a cord to something else. |
| 2. | a piece of ribbon or similar material tied or folded upon itself and used or worn as an ornament. |
| 3. | a group or cluster of persons or things: a knot of spectators. |
| 4. | the hard, cross-grained mass of wood at the place where a branch joins the trunk of a tree. |
| 5. | a part of this mass showing in a piece of lumber, wood panel, etc. |
| 6. | Anatomy, Zoology. a protuberance or swelling on or in a part or process, as in a muscle. |
| 7. | a protuberance in the tissue of a plant; an excrescence on a stem, branch, or root; a node or joint in a stem, esp. when of swollen form. |
| 8. | any of various fungal diseases of trees characterized by the formation of an excrescence, knob, or gnarl. |
| 9. | an involved, intricate, or difficult matter; complicated problem. |
| 10. | Nautical.
|
| 11. | a bond or tie: the knot of matrimony. |
| 12. | Also called joint, node. Mathematics. in interpolation, one of the points at which the values of a function are assigned. |
| 13. | to tie in a knot; form a knot in. |
| 14. | to secure or fasten by a knot. |
| 15. | to form protuberances, bosses, or knobs in; make knotty. |
| 16. | to become tied or tangled in a knot. |
| 17. | to form knots or joints. |
| 18. | tie the knot, Informal. to marry: They will tie the knot in November. |

joint
|
"The distance between the knots on the log-line should contain 1/120 of a mile, supposing the glass to run exactly half a minute." [Jorge Juan and Antonio de Ulloa, "A Voyage to South America" 1760]The verb meaning "to tie in a knot" is from 1547. Knot-hole is from 1726. Knothead "stupid person" is from 1940.
Joint
In general, a legal term describing a transaction in which two or more parties act together.
Investopedia Commentary
For example, a joint account is a bank or brokerage account that is owned together (jointly) by two or more people.
See also: Joint Account, Joint and Survivor Annuity, Joint Owned Property, Joint Return, Joint Stock Company, Joint Venture, Jointly and Severally
joint (joint)
n.
A point of articulation between two or more bones, especially such a connection that allows motion.
knot (nŏt)
n.
A compact intersection of interlaced material, as of cord, ribbon, or rope.
A protuberant growth or swelling in a tissue, such as a gland.