rows
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
row1 /rəʊ/
▶noun a number of people or things in a more or less straight line.
– phrases
a hard (or tough) row to hoe a difficult task.
in a row informal in succession.
a hard (or tough) row to hoe a difficult task.
in a row informal in succession.
– origin OE rāw, of Gmc origin.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
row2 /rəʊ/
▶verb
- 1 propel (a boat) with oars.
■ travel by propelling a boat in this way.
- 2 engage in the sport of rowing.
■ (row someone down) overtake a team in a rowing race.
– derivatives
rower noun,
rowing noun.
rower noun,
rowing noun.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
row3 /raʊ/ chiefly Brit.
▶noun
- 1 an acrimonious quarrel.
- 2 a loud noise or uproar.
- 3 informal a severe reprimand.
- 1 have a quarrel.
- 2 informal rebuke severely.
– origin C18: of unknown origin.
'rows' also found in these Oxford entries:
abacus
- aisle
- ambulacrum
- array
- bank
- biserial
- broadcast
- Buttons
- churidars
- comb jelly
- contingency table
- Corinthian
- derange
- diamond-bird
- distichous
- double-breasted
- dual in-line package
- echelon
- festoon blind
- file
- gangway
- garter stitch
- gauntlet
- Jacob's ladder
- mackerel sky
- maize
- matrix
- mezzanine
- order
- organ
- paca
- Pascal's triangle
- people carrier
- periodic table
- pew
- range
- rank
- sapsucker
- serried
- shift
- shirr
- stocking stitch
- tetrastich
- tier
- tile
- toothwort
- transpose
- triple harp
- truth table
- V

