domino

noun
/ˈdɒmɪnəʊ/UK/ˈdɑməˌnoʊ/US

Etymology

1801, borrowed from French domino (1771), originally the term for a hooded garment, itself from Medieval Latin domino, oblique case of dominus (“lord, master”); compare Medieval Latin dominicale (“a kind of veil”). By surface analysis, di- + -omino.

  1. derived from domino
  2. borrowed from domino

Definitions

  1. A tile divided into two squares, each having 0 to 6 (or sometimes more) dots or pips (as…

    A tile divided into two squares, each having 0 to 6 (or sometimes more) dots or pips (as in dice), used in the game of dominoes.

    • Dominoes of indiscretions down Falling all around, in cycles, in circles Constantly consuming Conquer and devour
    • If a domino had four squares on its surface, it would be a tetromino. With five squares, it would be a pentomino—nine, a nonomino, eleven, an unwieldy undecomino!
  2. A country that is expected to react to events in a neighboring country, according to the…

    A country that is expected to react to events in a neighboring country, according to the domino effect.

  3. A masquerade costume consisting of a hooded robe and a mask covering the upper part of…

    A masquerade costume consisting of a hooded robe and a mask covering the upper part of the face.

    • all the women were desirous of having the bundle immediately opened; which operation was at length performed by little Betsy, with the consent of Mr Jones: and the contents were found to be a domino, a mask, and a masquerade ticket.
    • The chair being announced, she fastened on her mask, and drew her domino round her, it not being her intention to display her splendid and fantastic costume till supper, when all the guests were expected to unmask.
    • For this scene, a large number of supers are engaged, and in order to further swell the crowd, practically all the available stage hands have to ‘walk on’ dressed in various coloured dominoes, and all wearing masks.
  4. + 7 more definitions
    1. The mask itself.

      • He wore a domino, but beneath it could be seen his whiskers, cut after the English fashion, and long and pendent.
    2. The person wearing the costume.

    3. A polyomino made up of two squares.

    4. A mistake in performing.

      • Any player is liable to make a 'domino' — that is to say, he goes wool-gathering and continues to play when everyone else has stopped. If he does so at a grown-up concert the fault is irredeemable […]
    5. A person's teeth.

      • […] break your dominoes by grinding them that way.
      • Look here, you chaps, don't you chew it too quick, or you'll break your dominoes on the nails!
    6. To collapse in the manner of dominoes.

      • A dismasting often means the dominoing of one mast into the other, down through the decks, cannoning the cargo through the hull below, and sinking the ship very quickly.
    7. To cause to collapse in the manner of dominoes.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for domino. 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