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Piece   /pis/   Listen
noun
Piece  n.  
1.
A fragment or part of anything separated from the whole, in any manner, as by cutting, splitting, breaking, or tearing; a part; a portion; as, a piece of sugar; to break in pieces. "Bring it out piece by piece."
2.
A definite portion or quantity, as of goods or work; as, a piece of broadcloth; a piece of wall paper.
3.
Any one thing conceived of as apart from other things of the same kind; an individual article; a distinct single effort of a series; a definite performance; especially:
(a)
A literary or artistic composition; as, a piece of poetry, music, or statuary.
(b)
A musket, gun, or cannon; as, a battery of six pieces; a following piece.
(c)
A coin; as, a sixpenny piece; formerly applied specifically to an English gold coin worth 22 shillings.
(d)
A fact; an item; as, a piece of news; a piece of knowledge.
4.
An individual; applied to a person as being of a certain nature or quality; often, but not always, used slightingly or in contempt. "If I had not been a piece of a logician before I came to him." "Thy mother was a piece of virtue." "His own spirit is as unsettled a piece as there is in all the world."
5.
(Chess) One of the superior men, distinguished from a pawn.
6.
A castle; a fortified building. (Obs.)
Of a piece, of the same sort, as if taken from the same whole; like; sometimes followed by with.
Piece of eight, the Spanish piaster, formerly divided into eight reals.
To give a piece of one's mind to, to speak plainly, bluntly, or severely to (another).
Piece broker, one who buys shreds and remnants of cloth to sell again.
Piece goods, goods usually sold by pieces or fixed portions, as shirtings, calicoes, sheetings, and the like.



verb
Piece  v. t.  (past & past part. pieced; pres. part. piecing)  
1.
To make, enlarge, or repair, by the addition of a piece or pieces; to patch; as, to piece a garment; often with out.
2.
To unite; to join; to combine. "His adversaries... pieced themselves together in a joint opposition against him."



Piece  v. i.  To unite by a coalescence of parts; to fit together; to join. "It pieced better."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Piece" Quotes from Famous Books



... Wildwood,—but his love for Smith's Grand March persisted and my sister Harriet was often called upon to play it for him while he explained its meaning. The war was passing into the mellow, reminiscent haze of memory and he loved the splendid pictures which this descriptive piece of martial music recalled to mind. So far as we then knew his pursuit of the Sunset ...
— A Son of the Middle Border • Hamlin Garland

... passengers, and to carry away the natives of other districts to till their ground. The present expedition was during Lent, and as well as I can now remember, in the year 1524, our little army consisting of 27 cavalry, 23 musqueteers, 72 foot soldiers armed with sword and target, and one field-piece under the direction of a cowardly fellow of a gunner, who pretended to have served in Italy. Besides these, we had 50 Mexican warriors, and the cacique of Cachula with some of his principal people, who were all terribly afraid. On approaching Chiapa, an advanced guard of four of our most ...
— A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Vol. IV. • Robert Kerr

... Napoleon was dead, a Bourbon reigned in France, and Freycinet was the servant of the monarchy to which he owed the command of the expedition of 1817. The suppression of Napoleon's name and the record of his actions from Peron's text, was a puerile piece of servility. ...
— Terre Napoleon - A history of French explorations and projects in Australia • Ernest Scott

... stood on the first piece of level ground on the way to the mainland. There was no other building within sight; and with its bleak boulders and rocks of strangest form, in perpetual death-struggle with the mighty force of ocean, resounding night and day with the rush and tramp of the wild sea-horses, as they ...
— A Loose End and Other Stories • S. Elizabeth Hall

... would read to me. My piece of "knitting-work" was still unfinished, and I, sitting near a window looking churchward, knitted, whilst Sophie pushed back from her low, cool brow those bands of softly purplish hair, and read to me something that strangely soothed my militant spirit, ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, Number 59, September, 1862 • Various


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