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tramline. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
tramline, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
tramline in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From tram + line.
Pronunciation
Noun
tramline (plural tramlines)
- (rail transport) The rails that a tram runs on.
- (tennis, British) Either of the two pairs of sidelines marked on a tennis court which mark the outside of the singles and doubles playing areas.
- (film) A scratch on a film, usually vertical, that extends through multiple frames.
1984, Movie Maker, volume 18, number 2, page 47:The tramline is therefore much less obvious on the screen. Also, if the scratch is on the base (i.e., on the back of the film), then it will not be in sharp focus.
- (medicine) A mark or bruise having the shape of two parallel lines.
- Synonym: tram track
a tramline scar
1970 June 13, Dorothy I. Vollum, “Skin Lesions in Drug Addicts”, in British Medical Journal, volume 2, number 5710, London: British Medical Association, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 647:The well-reported "tramlines" or parallel punctate scars on either side of the vein were seen in only four patients.
- (lexicography, Oxford English Dictionary jargon) A pair of vertical bars (||) placed to the left of the headword in certain editions of the OED to indicate that the term is "alien or not fully naturalized" (such as a recent borrowing).
2014 May 23, Danica Salazar, “Towards improved coverage of Southeast Asian Englishes in the Oxford English Dictionary”, in Lexicography, Berlin: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC:Those words that Murray classified as denizens and aliens, as well as those casuals approaching these two prior categories, were marked by two parallel lines beside the headword (||), a symbol known by the in-house term tramline. Murray himself admitted to the inherent subjectivity of his method of classification, which unsurprisingly led to a number of inconsistencies in the use of tramlines, and may even have contributed to the patchiness of the OED's regional coverage that Weiner acknowledged many years later.
Translations
See also
Verb
tramline (third-person singular simple present tramlines, present participle tramlining, simple past and past participle tramlined)
- (intransitive, road transport) Of a vehicle: to tend to follow the contours of the ground with its wheels.
- Synonym: nibble
Anagrams