n]
| 1. | condition with reference to place; location; situation. |
| 2. | a place occupied or to be occupied; site: a fortified position. |
| 3. | the proper, appropriate, or usual place: out of position. |
| 4. | situation or condition, esp. with relation to favorable or unfavorable circumstances: to be in an awkward position; to bargain from a position of strength. |
| 5. | status or standing: He has a position to maintain in the community. |
| 6. | high standing, as in society; important status: a person of wealth and position. |
| 7. | a post of employment: a position in a bank. |
| 8. | manner of being placed, disposed, or arranged: the relative position of the hands of a clock. |
| 9. | bodily posture or attitude: to be in a sitting position. |
| 10. | mental attitude; stand: one's position on a controversial topic. |
| 11. | the act of positing. |
| 12. | something that is posited. |
| 13. | Ballet. any of the five basic positions of the feet with which every step or movement begins and ends. Compare first position, second position, third position, fourth position, fifth position. |
| 14. | Music.
|
| 15. | Finance. a commitment to buy or sell securities: He took a large position in defense stocks. |
| 16. | Classical Prosody. the situation of a short vowel before two or more consonants or their equivalent, making the syllable metrically long. |
| 17. | to put in a particular or appropriate position; place. |
| 18. | to determine the position of; locate. |

position
position po·si·tion (pə-zĭsh'ən)
n.
A place occupied.
A bodily attitude or posture, especially a posture assumed by a patient to facilitate the performance of diagnostic, surgical, or therapeutic procedures.
The relation of an arbitrarily chosen portion of the fetus to the right or left side of the mother.