A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia
A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia

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widlass.html -


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English Idioms :: wide
widlass.html - See: FAR AND WIDE, GIVE A WIDE BERTH.
English Idioms :: wide of the mark
widlass.html - {adv.} or {adj. phr.} 1. Far from the target or the thing aimed at. * /James threw a stone at the cat but it went wide of the mark./ 2. Far from the truth; incorrect. * /You were wide of the mark when you said I did it, because Bill did it./ Contrast: HIT THE BULL'S-EYE, HIT THE NAIL ON THE HEAD.
English Idioms :: wide-eyed
widlass.html - See: ROUND-EYED.
English Idioms :: widow
widlass.html - See: GOLF WIDOW.
New English :: wide area network
widlass.html - (Science and Technology) see WAN
New English :: widening noun (Politics)
widlass.html - In relation to the EC: the policy of extending membership of the Community to more countries (possibly including the countries of Eastern Europe). Etymology: A specialized use of the figurative sense of widening, adopted by analogy with deepening (see below ). History and Usage: A word which has been used especially in connection with the debate over European integration in the second half of the eighties, and is often presented as the opposite approach from the Delors plan for EMU
    (otherwise known as deepening). A person who favours widening in the Community is known as a widener. Some of the wideners have gone to the other extreme, arguing that the Community must now abandon much of its cohesion...There is no need for widening to conflict with deepening. Indeed, every widening has brought more deepening. Independent 13 Dec. 1990, p. 22
widlass.html -