| 1. | an arrangement or plan: We objected to the layout of the house. |
| 2. | the act of laying or spreading out. |
| 3. | a plan or sketch, as of an advertisement or a page of a newspaper or magazine, indicating the arrangement and relationship of the parts, as of type and artwork. |
| 4. | (in advertising, publishing, etc.) the technique, process, or occupation of making layouts. |
| 5. | Journalism. spread (def. 33). |
| 6. | Informal. a place, as of residence or business, and the features that go with it; a setup: a fancy layout with a swimming pool and a tennis court. |
| 7. | Informal. a display or spread, as of dishes at a meal. |
| 8. | a collection or set of tools, implements, or the like. |
| 9. | Cards. an arrangement of cards dealt according to a given pattern, as in solitaire. |
| 10. | Diving, Gymnastics. a body position in which one is fully extended and arched backward, with the legs together and straight, the head thrown back, and the arms extended sideways. Compare pike 7 , tuck 1 (def. 13). |

verb, spread, spread⋅ing, noun, adjective | 1. | to draw, stretch, or open out, esp. over a flat surface, as something rolled or folded (often fol. by out). |
| 2. | to stretch out or unfurl in the air, as folded wings, a flag, etc. (often fol. by out). |
| 3. | to distribute over a greater or a relatively great area of space or time (often fol. by out): to spread out the papers on the table. |
| 4. | to display or exhibit the full extent of; set out in full: He spread the pots on the ground and started hawking his wares. |
| 5. | to dispose or distribute in a sheet or layer: to spread hay to dry. |
| 6. | to apply in a thin layer or coating: to spread butter on a slice of bread. |
| 7. | to overlay or cover with something: She spread the blanket over her knees. |
| 8. | to set or prepare (a table), as for a meal. |
| 9. | to extend or distribute over a region, place, period of time, among a group, etc. |
| 10. | to send out, scatter, or shed in various directions, as sound, light, etc. |
| 11. | to scatter abroad; diffuse or disseminate, as knowledge, news, disease, etc.: to spread the word of the gospel. |
| 12. | to move or force apart: He spread his arms over his head in surrender. |
| 13. | to flatten out: to spread the end of a rivet by hammering. |
| 14. | Phonetics.
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| 15. | to become stretched out or extended, as a flag in the wind; expand, as in growth. |
| 16. | to extend over a greater or a considerable area or period: The factory spread along the river front. |
| 17. | to be or lie outspread or fully extended or displayed, as a landscape or scene. |
| 18. | to admit of being spread or applied in a thin layer, as a soft substance: Margarine spreads easily. |
| 19. | to become extended or distributed over a region, as population, animals, plants, etc. |
| 20. | to become shed abroad, diffused, or disseminated, as light, influences, rumors, ideas, infection, etc. |
| 21. | to be forced apart, as the rails of a railroad track; separate. |
| 22. | an act or instance of spreading: With a spread of her arms the actress acknowledged the applause. |
| 23. | expansion, extension, or diffusion: the spread of consumerism. |
| 24. | the extent of spreading: to measure the spread of branches. |
| 25. | Finance.
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| 26. | capacity for spreading: the spread of an elastic material. |
| 27. | a distance or range, as between two points or dates: The long-distance movers planned a five-day spread between pickup and delivery. |
| 28. | a stretch, expanse, or extent of something: a spread of timber. |
| 29. | a cloth covering for a bed, table, or the like, esp. a bedspread. |
| 30. | Informal. an abundance of food set out on a table; feast. |
| 31. | any food preparation for spreading on bread, crackers, etc., as jam or peanut butter. |
| 32. | Aeronautics. wingspan. |
| 33. | Also called layout. Journalism. (in newspapers and magazines) an extensive, varied treatment of a subject, consisting primarily either of a number of cuts (picture spread) or of a major story and several supplementary stories, usually extending across three or more columns. Compare double truck. |
| 34. | an advertisement, photograph, article, or the like, covering several columns, a full page, or two facing pages of a newspaper, magazine, book, etc.: a full-page spread; a two-page spread. |
| 35. | two facing pages, as of a newspaper, magazine, or book. |
| 36. | landed property, as a farm or ranch. |
| 37. | lay 1 (def. 40). |
| 38. | point spread. |
| 39. | Jewelry. (of a gem) cut with the table too large and the crown too shallow for maximum brilliance; swindled. |
| 40. | Phonetics. (of the opening between the lips) extended laterally. Compare rounded (def. 2), unrounded. |
| 41. | spread oneself thin, to carry on so many projects simultaneously that none is done adequately, or that one's health suffers: Many college students spread themselves thin by taking on too many activities during the semester. |

layout
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spread
A position taken in two or more options or futures contracts to profit through a change in the relative price relationships. Purchasing an option to expire in October and selling an option on the same asset expiring three months earlier is one example of a spread.
The difference in price between two futures contracts that are identical except for delivery date.
The difference between the bid and ask prices for a particular security. A large spread often indicates inactive trading of the security. Also called markup. See also effective spread, gross spread, narrow the spread.
The difference in yields between two fixed-income securities. See also basis point.