What is the meaning of TAPE. Phrases containing TAPE
See meanings and uses of TAPE!TAPE
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Annual Trauma Anesthesia and Critical Care Symposium and World Exposition
Adjustable Side Link
Preferred Data Interchange
Digital Audio File
Association for Yoga Studies
: Antecedent Precipitation Index
Institute for Community Health
acid--valnoctic acid
Exercise Planning Workshop
Brattleboro Arts Initiative
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a.
Regularly narrowed toward the point; becoming small toward one end; conical; pyramidical; as, taper fingers.
n.
A plant of the genus Verbascum (V. Thapsus); the common mullein. [Also high-taper and hag-taper.]
a.
Lighted with a taper or tapers; as, a tapered choir.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Tapestry
n.
A tapeline; also, a metallic ribbon so marked as to serve as a tapeline; as, a steel tape.
n.
The quality or state of being taper; tapering form; taper.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Taper
v. i.
To become gradually smaller toward one end; as, a sugar loaf tapers toward one end.
imp. & p. p.
of Tapestry
v. t.
To adorn with tapestry, or as with tapestry.
imp. & p. p.
of Taper
a.
Pertaining to, or characterized by, official formality. See Red tape, under Red, a.
n.
A painted tape, marked with linear dimensions, as inches, feet, etc., and often inclosed in a case, -- used for measuring.
n.
Worked or figured stuff; tapestry.
n.
A tapering form; gradual diminution of thickness in an elongated object; as, the taper of a spire.
pl.
of Tapeti
pl.
of Tapestry
n.
A narrow fillet or band of cotton or linen; a narrow woven fabric used for strings and the like; as, curtains tied with tape.
n.
Any one of numerous species of cestode worms belonging to Taenia and many allied genera. The body is long, flat, and composed of numerous segments or proglottids varying in shape, those toward the end of the body being much larger and longer than the anterior ones, and containing the fully developed sexual organs. The head is small, destitute of a mouth, but furnished with two or more suckers (which vary greatly in shape in different genera), and sometimes, also, with hooks for adhesion to the walls of the intestines of the animals in which they are parasitic. The larvae (see Cysticercus) live in the flesh of various creatures, and when swallowed by another animal of the right species develop into the mature tapeworm in its intestine. See Illustration in Appendix.
v. t.
To make or cause to taper.
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