knot
Pronunciation: (not), [key]
— n., v., knot•ted, knot•ting.
—n.
- an interlacing, twining, looping, etc., of a cord, rope, or the like, drawn tight into a knob or lump, for fastening, binding, or connecting two cords together or a cord to something else.
- a piece of ribbon or similar material tied or folded upon itself and used or worn as an ornament.
- a group or cluster of persons or things: a knot of spectators.
- the hard, cross-grained mass of wood at the place where a branch joins the trunk of a tree.
- a part of this mass showing in a piece of lumber, wood panel, etc.
- a protuberance or swelling on or in a part or process, as in a muscle.
- a protuberance in the tissue of a plant; an excrescence on a stem, branch, or root; a node or joint in a stem, esp. when of swollen form.
- any of various fungal diseases of trees characterized by the formation of an excrescence, knob, or gnarl.
- an involved, intricate, or difficult matter; complicated problem.
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- a unit of speed equal to one nautical mile or about 1.15 statute miles per hour.
- a unit of 47 feet 3 inches (13.79 meters) on a log line, marked off by knots.
- a nautical mile.
- a bond or tie: the knot of matrimony.
- in interpolation, one of the points at which the values of a function are assigned.
- to marry: They will tie the knot in November.
—v.t.
- to tie in a knot; form a knot in.
- to secure or fasten by a knot.
- to form protuberances, bosses, or knobs in; make knotty.
—v.i.
- to become tied or tangled in a knot.
- to form knots or joints.
knot
Pronunciation: (not), [key]
— n.
- either of two large sandpipers, Calidris canutus or C. tenuirostris, that breed in the Arctic and winter in the Southern Hemisphere. Also called
Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Copyright © 1997, by Random House, Inc., on Infoplease.