- beginning of line
- n. 行の先頭, 行頭
English-Japanese new dictionary. 2007.
English-Japanese new dictionary. 2007.
Line break (poetry) — A line break in poetry is when a line of the poetry ceases to extend, and a new line starts, usually at the left margin. Not all poetry has all of its lines left margin justified, however, and there even exists poetry where a new line does not… … Wikipedia
Line Mode Browser — displaying the German Wikipedia Original author(s) … Wikipedia
line# — line n Line, row, rank, file, echelon, tier are comparable when meaning a series of things arranged in continuous or uniform order. Line means little more than this, except when it is attached to a specific application that increases its… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Line 3 (Madrid Metro) — Line 3 of the Madrid Metro was opened in August 1936 between Sol and Embajadores, a few days before the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. In 1941 it was extended from Sol to Argüelles, in 1949 from Embajadores to Delicias, in 1951 from Delicias … Wikipedia
Line completion — is a text editor feature similar to word completion, first introduced by Juraj Simlovic in TED Notepad, in July 2006. When a user begins a line that starts with a a frequently used phrase, the computer automatically completes the first part of it … Wikipedia
line of scrimmage American Football — the imaginary line separating the teams at the beginning of a play. → line … English new terms dictionary
Line-o-rama — is a feature found on some DVDs beginning in 2007 like Superbad and Knocked Up. Line o rama is similar to an out take reel but instead it typically highlights comical variations on favorite lines from the movie. These takes are edited in a rapid… … Wikipedia
line of scrimmage — n a line in American football where the ball is placed at the beginning of a period of play … Dictionary of contemporary English
line of scrimmage — line′ of scrim′mage n. spo an imaginary line on a football field, parallel to the goal lines, along which opposing teams face each other at the beginning of each play • Etymology: 1905–10 … From formal English to slang
Line dance — A line dance is choreographed dance with a repeated sequence of steps in which a group of people dance in one or more lines (British English, rows ) without regard for the gender of the individuals, all facing the same direction, and executing… … Wikipedia
Line of Property — The Line of Property is the name commonly given to the line dividing Indian from British Colonial lands established in the Treaty of Fort Stanwix of 1768. In western Pennsylvania it is referred to as the Purchase line. Treaty description of the… … Wikipedia