rows

[roh] Origin

row

1[roh]
noun
1.
a number of persons or things arranged in a line, especially a straight line: a row of apple trees.
2.
a line of persons or things so arranged: The petitioners waited in a row.
3.
a line of adjacent seats facing the same way, as in a theater: seats in the third row of the balcony.
4.
a street formed by two continuous lines of buildings.
5.
Music. tone row.
EXPAND
6.
Checkers. one of the horizontal lines of squares on a checkerboard; rank.
COLLAPSE
verb (used with object)
7.
to put in a row (often followed by up).

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Rows is always a great word to know.
So is bezoar. Does it mean:
a calculus or concretion found in the stomach or intestines of certain animals, esp. ruminants, formerly reputed to be an effective remedy for poison.
a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question.
8.
hard/long row to hoe, a difficult task or set of circumstances to confront: At 32 and with two children, she found attending medical school a hard row to hoe.

Origin:
1175–1225; Middle English row(e); compare Old English rǣw
Dictionary.com Unabridged

row

2[roh]
verb (used without object)
1.
to propel a vessel by the leverage of an oar or the like.
verb (used with object)
2.
to propel (a vessel) by the leverage of an oar or the like.
3.
to convey in a boat that is rowed.
4.
to convey or propel (something) in a manner suggestive of rowing.
5.
to require, use, or be equipped with (a number of oars): The captain's barge rowed twenty oars.
6.
to use (oarsmen) for rowing.
EXPAND
7.
to perform or participate in by rowing: to row a race.
8.
to row against in a race: Oxford rows Cambridge.
COLLAPSE
noun
9.
an act, instance, or period of rowing: It was a long row to the far bank.
10.
an excursion in a rowboat: to go for a row.

Origin:
before 950; Middle English rowen, Old English rōwan; cognate with Old Norse rōa; akin to Latin rēmus oar. Compare rudder

row·a·ble, adjective
row·er, noun
un·der·row·er, noun

row

3[rou]
noun
1.
a noisy dispute or quarrel; commotion.
2.
noise or clamor.
verb (used without object)
3.
to quarrel noisily.
verb (used with object)
4.
Chiefly British. to upbraid severely; scold.

Origin:
1740–50; origin uncertain


1. spat, tiff, scrap, scrape, set-to.

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2012.
Cite This Source Link To rows
Etymonline
Word Origin & History

row
"noisy commotion," 1746, Cambridge University slang, of uncertain origin, perhaps related to rousel "drinking bout" (1602), a shortened form of carousal. Klein suggests a back-formation from rouse (n.), mistaken as a plural (cf. pea from pease).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper
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