| 1. | a small body of standing water; pond. |
| 2. | a still, deep place in a stream. |
| 3. | any small collection of liquid on a surface: a pool of blood. |
| 4. | a puddle. |
| 5. | swimming pool. |
| 6. | a subterranean accumulation of oil or gas held in porous and permeable sedimentary rock (reservoir). |
| 7. | to form a pool. |
| 8. | (of blood) to accumulate in a body part or organ. |
| 9. | to cause pools to form in. |
| 10. | to cause (blood) to form pools. |
| 11. | of or for a pool: pool filters. |
| 12. | taking place or occurring around or near a pool: a pool party. |

| 1. | Also called pocket billiards. any of various games played on a pool table with a cue ball and 15 other balls that are usually numbered, in which the object is to drive all the balls into the pockets with the cue ball. |
| 2. | the total amount staked by a combination of bettors, as on a race, to be awarded to the successful bettor or bettors. |
| 3. | the combination of such bettors. |
| 4. | an association of competitors who agree to control the production, market, and price of a commodity for mutual benefit, although they appear to be rivals. |
| 5. | Finance. a combination of persons or organizations for the purpose of manipulating the prices of securities. |
| 6. | a combination of resources, funds, etc., for common advantage. |
| 7. | the combined interests or funds. |
| 8. | a facility, resource, or service that is shared by a group of people: a car pool; a typing pool. |
| 9. | the persons or parties involved. |
| 10. | the stakes in certain games. |
| 11. | British. a billiard game. |
| 12. | Fencing. a match in which each teammate successively plays against each member of the opposing team. |
| 13. | to put (resources, money, etc.) into a pool, or common stock or fund, as for a financial venture, according to agreement. |
| 14. | to form a pool of. |
| 15. | to make a common interest of. |
| 16. | to enter into or form a pool. |
| 17. | of or belonging to a pool: a pool typist; a pool reporter. |
pool
A temporary affiliation of two or more people in an attempt to manipulate a security's price and/or volume. The pool is necessary in order to acquire the capital needed to manipulate a stock having a large market value. Pools were especially popular in the 1920s and early 1930s but now have been regulated out of existence. See also blind pool, trading pool.
See mortgage pool.
pool (p&oomacr;l)
n.
A collection of blood in any region of the body due to dilation and retardation of the circulation in capillaries and veins.
POOL
Parallel Object-Oriented Language.
A series of languages from Philips Research Labs.
See POOL2, POOL-I, POOL-T.
(1995-02-07)
Pool
a pond, or reservoir, for holding water (Heb. berekhah; modern Arabic, birket), an artificial cistern or tank. Mention is made of the pool of Gibeon (2 Sam. 2:13); the pool of Hebron (4:12); the upper pool at Jerusalem (2 Kings 18:17; 20:20); the pool of Samaria (1 Kings 22:38); the king's pool (Neh. 2:14); the pool of Siloah (Neh. 3:15; Eccles. 2:6); the fishpools of Heshbon (Cant. 7:4); the "lower pool," and the "old pool" (Isa. 22:9,11). The "pool of Bethesda" (John 5:2,4, 7) and the "pool of Siloam" (John 9:7, 11) are also mentioned. Isaiah (35:7) says, "The parched ground shall become a pool." This is rendered in the Revised Version "glowing sand," etc. (marg., "the mirage," etc.). The Arabs call the mirage "serab," plainly the same as the Hebrew word _sarab_, here rendered "parched ground." "The mirage shall become a pool", i.e., the mock-lake of the burning desert shall become a real lake, "the pledge of refreshment and joy." The "pools" spoken of in Isa. 14:23 are the marshes caused by the ruin of the canals of the Euphrates in the neighbourhood of Babylon. The cisterns or pools of the Holy City are for the most part excavations beneath the surface. Such are the vast cisterns in the temple hill that have recently been discovered by the engineers of the Palestine Exploration Fund. These underground caverns are about thirty-five in number, and are capable of storing about ten million gallons of water. They are connected with one another by passages and tunnels.