| 1. | an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil. |
| 2. | any of various implements resembling or suggesting this, as a kind of plane for cutting grooves or a contrivance for clearing away snow from a road or track. |
| 3. | Type Founding. (formerly) an instrument for cutting the groove in the foot of type. |
| 4. | Bookbinding. a device for trimming the edges of the leaves by hand. |
| 5. | (initial capital letter ) Astronomy.
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| 6. | to turn up (soil) with a plow. |
| 7. | to make (a furrow) with a plow. |
| 8. | to tear up, cut into, or make a furrow, groove, etc. in (a surface) with or as if with a plow (often fol. by up): The tractor plowed up an acre of trees. |
| 9. | to clear by the use of a plow, esp. a snowplow (sometimes fol. by out): The city's work crews were busily plowing the streets after the blizzard. |
| 10. | to invest, as capital (often fol. by into): to plow several hundred million into developing new oil fields. |
| 11. | to reinvest or reutilize (usually fol. by back): to plow profits back into new plants and equipment. |
| 12. | (of a ship, boat, animal, etc.)
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| 13. | Slang: Vulgar. to have sexual intercourse with. |
| 14. | to till the soil or work with a plow. |
| 15. | to take plowing in a specified way: land that plows easily. |
| 16. | to move forcefully through something in the manner of a plow (often fol. by through, into, along, etc.): The cop plowed through the crowd, chasing after the thief. The car plowed into our house. |
| 17. | to proceed in a slow, laborious, and steady manner (often fol. by through): The researcher plowed through a pile of reports. |
| 18. | to move through water by cleaving the surface: a ship plowing through a turbulent sea. |
| 19. | plow under,
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plow into
Strike with force, crash into; also, attack vigorously. For example, The truck plowed into the retaining wall, or Carol plowed into the pile of correspondence. This expression transfers the force of the farmer's plow to other enterprises. [Late 1800s]