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1[ar-oh]
noun
a slender, straight, generally pointed missile or weapon made to be shot from a bow and equipped with feathers at the end of the shaft near the nock, for controlling flight.
anything resembling an arrow in form, function, or character.
a linear figure having a wedge-shaped end, as one used on a map or architectural drawing, to indicate direction or placement.
Astronomy., Arrow, the constellation Sagitta.
verb (used with object)
to indicate the proper position of (an insertion) by means of an arrow (often followed byin ).
to arrow in a comment between the paragraphs.
Arrow
2[ar-oh]
noun
Kenneth Joseph, 1921–2017, U.S. economist: Nobel Prize 1972.
arrow
/ ˈærəʊ /
noun
a long slender pointed weapon, usually having feathers fastened at the end as a balance, that is shot from a bow
any of various things that resemble an arrow in shape, function, or speed, such as a sign indicating direction or position
Other Word Forms
- arrowless adjective
- arrowlike adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of arrow1
Word History and Origins
Origin of arrow1
Example Sentences
There are lane arrows in some of the floorboards while original lane numbers are painted on the basement girders of the back-of-house spaces.
Nearby, fist-sized stones form the phone’s number along with a huge arrow pointing to the booth.
The trophy features many nods from the 60-year-old musician, including a hand-drawn “cresting wave” illustration and an arrow and mod symbol — an allusion to Vedder’s tribute to the Who on his personal guitar.
Her Wendy is an arrow flying into dangerous places with a child’s delusions of immortality.
“It’s almost like I spin the wheel and wherever the arrow lands, that’s where I start,” he explains.
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