pole
91pole — 1. noun /pəʊl,poʊl/ a) Originally, a stick; now specifically, a long and slender piece of metal or (especially) wood, used for various construction or support purposes. b) A type of basic fishing rod. 2. verb /pəʊl,poʊl/ To propel by pushin …
92pole(s) — Markers at measured distances around the track designating the distance from the finish. The quarter pole, for instance, is a quarter of a mile from the finish, not from the start …
93pole — po·le s.f.inv. TS metrol. unità di misura della lunghezza usata nei paesi anglosassoni, corrispondente a 5,029 m (simb. pl) {{line}} {{/line}} DATA: 1958. ETIMO: dall ingl. pole propr. palo, pertica …
94pole — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. push, jab, prod, thrust, punch, nudge. See impulse. n. shaft, staff, post, stick, beam, mast; terminal, axis, hub, pivot; extremity, North or South Pole. See opposition. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. shaft …
95Pole — ♦♦♦ Poles N COUNT A Pole is a Polish citizen, or a person of Polish origin …
96pole — an erect penis An obvious vulgarism. In archaic use, to pole was to copulate with, of a male …
97pole — I n shaft, rod, post; flag pole, flagstaff; mast, spar, timber, tree; beam, stanchion; pillar, column, upright. II n 1. extremity, extreme, limit; end of the earth, end of the rainbow, ultima Thule or Thule. 2. cynosure, polestar, lodestar,… …
98Pole — I [[t]poʊl[/t]] n. peo geg a native or inhabitant of Poland II Pole [[t]poʊl[/t]] n. Reginald, 1500–58, English cardinal and last Roman Catholic archbishop of Canterbury …
99Pole — /poʊl/ (say pohl) noun a native or inhabitant of Poland. {German, singular of Polen, from Polish Poljane Poles, literally, field dwellers, from pole field} …
100Pole — poliai statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. poles vok. Pole, m rus. полюсы, m pranc. pôles, m …