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Point   /pɔɪnt/   Listen
Point

noun
1.
A geometric element that has position but no extension.
2.
The precise location of something; a spatially limited location.
3.
A brief version of the essential meaning of something.  "He missed the point of the joke" , "Life has lost its point"
4.
An isolated fact that is considered separately from the whole.  Synonyms: detail, item.  "A point of information"
5.
A specific identifiable position in a continuum or series or especially in a process.  Synonyms: degree, level, stage.  "At what stage are the social sciences?"
6.
An instant of time.  Synonym: point in time.
7.
The object of an activity.
8.
A V shape.  Synonyms: peak, tip.
9.
A very small circular shape.  Synonym: dot.  "Draw lines between the dots"
10.
The unit of counting in scoring a game or contest.  "A touchdown counts 6 points"
11.
A promontory extending out into a large body of water.
12.
A distinct part that can be specified separately in a group of things that could be enumerated on a list.  Synonym: item.  "She had several items on her shopping list" , "The main point on the agenda was taken up first"
13.
A style in speech or writing that arrests attention and has a penetrating or convincing quality or effect.
14.
An outstanding characteristic.  Synonym: spot.
15.
Sharp end.  "He broke the point of his pencil"
16.
Any of 32 horizontal directions indicated on the card of a compass.  Synonym: compass point.
17.
A linear unit used to measure the size of type; approximately 1/72 inch.
18.
One percent of the total principal of a loan; it is paid at the time the loan is made and is independent of the interest on the loan.
19.
A punctuation mark (.) placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop or after abbreviations.  Synonyms: full point, full stop, period, stop.
20.
A V-shaped mark at one end of an arrow pointer.  Synonym: head.
21.
The dot at the left of a decimal fraction.  Synonyms: decimal point, percentage point.
22.
The property of a shape that tapers to a sharp tip.  Synonym: pointedness.
23.
A distinguishing or individuating characteristic.
24.
The gun muzzle's direction.  Synonym: gunpoint.
25.
A wall socket.  Synonym: power point.
26.
A contact in the distributor; as the rotor turns its projecting arm contacts them and current flows to the spark plugs.  Synonyms: breaker point, distributor point.
verb
(past & past part. pointed; pres. part. pointing)
1.
Indicate a place, direction, person, or thing; either spatially or figuratively.  Synonyms: designate, indicate, show.  "He pointed to the empty parking space" , "He indicated his opponents"
2.
Be oriented.  Synonym: orient.  "The dancers toes pointed outward"
3.
Direct into a position for use.  Synonyms: charge, level.  "He charged his weapon at me"
4.
Direct the course; determine the direction of travelling.  Synonyms: channelise, channelize, direct, guide, head, maneuver, manoeuver, manoeuvre, steer.
5.
Be a signal for or a symptom of.  Synonyms: bespeak, betoken, indicate, signal.  "Her behavior points to a severe neurosis" , "The economic indicators signal that the euro is undervalued"
6.
Sail close to the wind.  Synonym: luff.
7.
Mark (Hebrew words) with diacritics.
8.
Mark with diacritics.
9.
Mark (a psalm text) to indicate the points at which the music changes.
10.
Be positionable in a specified manner.
11.
Intend (something) to move towards a certain goal.  Synonyms: aim, direct, place, target.  "Criticism directed at her superior" , "Direct your anger towards others, not towards yourself"
12.
Indicate the presence of (game) by standing and pointing with the muzzle.
13.
Give a point to.  Synonyms: sharpen, taper.
14.
Repair the joints of bricks.  Synonym: repoint.



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"Point" Quotes from Famous Books



... which perhaps she would only partially believe. He had felt that it would be most difficult to make her understand that, though this was so, he had not been in any plot, and had not known of it any more than she did when Bice was brought to his house. This would have been the difficult point in the matter, and now, heaven be praised! all that was over, and there was no mystery, nothing to explain. But so strange is human sentiment that the world felt quite impoverished to Sir Tom, though he was much relieved. Life became for the moment a more commonplace affair altogether. He was ...
— Sir Tom • Mrs. Oliphant

... the federated army of the Northwest tribes under the celebrated chief, Cornstalk, he was lieutenant of a company in the command of his father, General Evan Shelby, and gained distinction for gallant services in the great victory won at Point Pleasant on the 10th of October, 1774, which forced the Indians to sue for peace. He visited Kentucky in 1775, with the vanguard of pioneer explorers, and marked the lands which afterward, in 1780, he returned and secured by entry and upon which he settled ...
— The Battle of New Orleans • Zachary F. Smith

... mind, when obliged to quit Madrid. Elvira was out of patience at all these follies, and endeavoured at persuading her to act like a reasonable Woman. Her advice was thrown away: Leonella assured her at parting that nothing could make her forget the perfidious Don Christoval. In this point She was fortunately mistaken. An honest Youth of Cordova, Journeyman to an Apothecary, found that her fortune would be sufficient to set him up in a genteel Shop of his own: In consequence of this reflection He avowed himself her Admirer. Leonella was not inflexible. The ardour of ...
— The Monk; a romance • M. G. Lewis

... were roadless and these valleys hardly peopled, the monks of a great priory church on the neighbouring coast built here this little pilgrimage chapel, on the highest point of a long and desolate track connecting the inland towns with the great abbeys of the coast, and with all the western seaboard. Fields had been enclosed and farms had risen about it; but still the little church was one of the loneliest and remotest ...
— Helbeck of Bannisdale, Vol. II • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... At this point the Highlander became more earnest, and treated his companion to what would have passed in civilised lands for a fair temperance lecture, in which he sought to describe graphically the evils of ...
— The Big Otter • R.M. Ballantyne


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