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Needle   /nˈidəl/   Listen
noun
Needle  n.  
1.
A small instrument of steel, sharply pointed at one end, with an eye to receive a thread, used in sewing. Note: In some needles (as for sewing machines) the eye is at the pointed end, but in ordinary needles it is at the blunt end.
2.
See Magnetic needle, under Magnetic.
3.
A slender rod or wire used in knitting; a knitting needle; also, a hooked instrument which carries the thread or twine, and by means of which knots or loops are formed in the process of netting, knitting, or crocheting.
4.
(Bot.) One of the needle-shaped secondary leaves of pine trees. See Pinus.
5.
Any slender, pointed object, like a needle, as a pointed crystal, a sharp pinnacle of rock, an obelisk, etc.
6.
A hypodermic needle; a syringe fitted with a hypodermic needle, used for injecting fluids into the body. (Informal)
7.
An injection of medicine from a hypodermic needle; a shot.
Dipping needle. See under Dipping.
Needle bar, the reciprocating bar to which the needle of a sewing machine is attached.
Needle beam (Arch.), in shoring, the horizontal cross timber which goes through the wall or a pier, and upon which the weight of the wall rests, when a building is shored up to allow of alterations in the lower part.
Needle furze (Bot.), a prickly leguminous plant of Western Europe; the petty whin (Genista Anglica).
Needle gun, a firearm loaded at the breech with a cartridge carrying its own fulminate, which is exploded by driving a slender needle, or pin, into it. (archaic)
Needle loom (Weaving), a loom in which the weft thread is carried through the shed by a long eye-pointed needle instead of by a shuttle.
Needle ore (Min.), acicular bismuth; a sulphide of bismuth, lead, and copper occuring in acicular crystals; called also aikinite.
Needle shell (Zool.), a sea urchin.
Needle spar (Min.), aragonite.
Needle telegraph, a telegraph in which the signals are given by the deflections of a magnetic needle to the right or to the left of a certain position.
Sea needle (Zool.), the garfish.



verb
Needle  v. t.  
1.
To form in the shape of a needle; as, to needle crystals.
2.
To tease (a person), especially repeatedly.
3.
To prod or goad (someone) into action by teasing or daring.



Needle  v. i.  To form needles; to crystallize in the form of needles.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Needle" Quotes from Famous Books



... it again has trained itself, parasitic on the parasite, plant upon plant of glass ivy, bearing crystal bells, (29) each of which, too, protrudes its living flower; on another leg is a fresh species, like a little heather-bush of whitest ivory, (30) and every needle leaf a polype cell - let us stop before the imagination grows dizzy with the contemplation of those myriads of beautiful atomies. And what is their use? Each living flower, each polype mouth is feeding fast, sweeping into itself, by ...
— Glaucus; or The Wonders of the Shore • Charles Kingsley

... Chateau-Thierry and three years trying to learn to pronounce it. Ireland undertakes to settle her ancient problem on the basis of self-extermination. Several rich retail profiteers die, the approval being hearty and general, and on arriving at heaven experience great difficulty in passing through the Needle's Eye, or tradesmen's entrance. Somebody tells Henry Ford about what some high priests did in Jerusalem nearly two thousand years ago and in the first flush of his startled indignation he becomes violently anti-Semitic. General Pershing returns from the battlefields of Europe ...
— One Third Off • Irvin S. Cobb

... supersonic speed, brought back his great red wings and made a neat three-point landing without injuring the needle-sharp dart at the end of his long, black tail. Still feeling jovial, he kicked all three of Cerberus's heads, then zoomed down through the tunnel to the north bank of the ...
— Satan and the Comrades • Ralph Bennitt

... into the air. Down came the arrows in showers upon the heads of the English warriors, and one of them pierced Harold's eye, stretching him lifeless on the ground. In a series of representations in worsted work, known as the Bayeux Tapestry, which was wrought by the needle of some unknown woman and is now exhibited in the museum of that city, the scenes of the battle and the events preceding it are ...
— A Student's History of England, v. 1 (of 3) - From the earliest times to the Death of King Edward VII • Samuel Rawson Gardiner

... obnoxious to each carping tongue, Who says my hand a needle better fits; A poet's pen all scorn I thus should wrong, For such despite they cast on female wits: If what I do prove well it won't advance, They'll say it's stolen, or ...
— A Little Girl in Old Boston • Amanda Millie Douglas


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