clothesline

noun
/ˈkləʊðzlaɪn/UK/ˈkloʊðzlaɪn/US

Etymology

From clothes + line.

  1. derived from linea
  2. derived from ligne
  3. derived from *līno-
  4. inherited from *līną
  5. inherited from *līnǭ
  6. inherited from *līnā
  7. inherited from līne
  8. inherited from line
  9. compounded as clothesline — “clothes + line

Definitions

  1. A rope or cord tied up outdoors to hang clothes on so they can dry.

    • Hang this towel out on the clothesline for me.
  2. A structure with multiple cords for the same purpose, such as a Hills hoist.

  3. The act of knocking a person over by striking his or her upper body or neck with one's…

    The act of knocking a person over by striking his or her upper body or neck with one's arm, as if he or she had run into a low clothesline.

  4. + 1 more definition
    1. To knock (a person) over by striking them across the neck or upper body with an…

      To knock (a person) over by striking them across the neck or upper body with an outstretched arm, mimicking the motion of running into a low clothesline.

      • The referee called a personal foul, when he clotheslined the running back.
      • One beast jams out its arm, as if to clothesline me, jagged claws poised to take my head off at the neck. I let my feet fall from under me, throwing my legs forward, praying for some momentum, ducking and sliding, a mad limbo to freedom.
      • "I turned around and the next thing I was taken out by this big guy. I'm not sure if he punched me or clothes-lined me," he said.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for clothesline. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA