surface

noun
/ˈsɜː.fɪs/UK/ˈsɜɹ.fəs/US

Etymology

Etymology tree Middle French surfacebor. English surface From Middle French surface. By surface analysis, sur- + face. Doublet of superficies.

  1. borrowed from surface

Definitions

  1. The overside or upside of a flat object such as a table, or of a liquid.

    • Use the lowest light level required. Be mindful of surface conditions, as some surfaces may reflect more light into the night sky than was intended.
  2. The outside hull of a tangible object.

    • Of all the transitions brought about on the Earth’s surface by temperature change, the melting of ice into water is the starkest. It is binary. And for the land beneath, the air above and the life around, it changes everything.
    • [The researchers] noticed many of their pieces of [plastic marine] debris sported surface pits around two microns across.
  3. Outward or external appearance.

    • On the surface, the spy looked like a typical businessman.
  4. + 11 more definitions
    1. The locus of an equation (especially one with exactly two degrees of freedom) in a space…

      The locus of an equation (especially one with exactly two degrees of freedom) in a space of more than two dimensions.

    2. The story or image suggested by a cryptic clue, when read as a whole sentence without…

      The story or image suggested by a cryptic clue, when read as a whole sentence without considering wordplay.

      • The surface is clearly about people like you and me, those whose better days are behind us and who now shop at M&S.
      • If you are fooled by the surface you start thinking about internet browsers. But in this case it deviously refers to an animal that feeds by browsing, which is a longer standing use of the word.
      • This clue with a booze-related surface uses “sandwich” wordplay, with an insertion of P from “priceless” into “lean to”, which the Oxford Dictionary of English lists as an alternative to “lean towards”, meaning the same as “incline to”.
    3. A portion of the display to which graphics can be rendered.

      • The video player algorithm requires a target surface.
    4. To provide with a surface

      To provide with a surface; to apply a surface to.

      • The crew surfaced the road with bitumen.
    5. To rise to the surface.

      • There was great relief when the missing diver finally surfaced.
    6. To bring to the surface.

      • Sage went immediately to work; Damien surfaced the submarine and readied the group to meet outside the hatch.
    7. To come out of hiding.

      • The company believes the stolen chocolate bars could surface through unofficial sales channels across European markets.
    8. To become known or apparent

      To become known or apparent; to appear or be found; to come to light.

      • Subordinate clauses, by contrast, exhibit V1 or V2 only around 35% of the time, with the verb usually surfacing later.
      • They're not growing. Why would I surface them to new people? [...That] makes our video surface less, and that makes the next video surface less.
    9. To make (information, facts, content, etc) known.

      • They're not growing. Why would I surface them to new people? [...That] makes our video surface less, and that makes the next video surface less.
    10. To work a mine near the surface.

    11. A surname.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for surface. 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