ply
Meanings
noun
- A layer of material.
- A strand that, twisted together with other strands, makes up rope or yarn.
- Clipping of plywood.
- In two-player sequential games, a "half-turn" or a move made by one of the players.
- A condition, a state.
verb
- To bend; to fold; to mould; (figuratively) to adapt, to modify; to change (a person's) mind, to cause (a person) to submit.
- To bend, to flex; to be bent by something, to give way or yield (to a force, etc.).
verb
- To work at (something) diligently.
- To wield or use (a tool, a weapon, etc.) steadily or vigorously.
- To press upon; to urge persistently.
- To persist in offering something to, especially for the purpose of inducement or persuasion.
- To travel over (a route) regularly.
- To work diligently.
- To manoeuvre a sailing vessel so that the direction of the wind changes from one side of the vessel to the other; to work to windward, to beat, to tack.
noun
- A bent; a direction.
Pronunciation
Word forms
Etymology
From Middle English pleit, plit, plite (“a fold, pleat, wrinkle; braid, strand in a braided cord, ply”), from Anglo-Norman pli, plei, pleit, and Middle French pli, ploy, ply (“a fold, pleat; joint in armour; situation, state”) (modern French pli (“a fold, pleat”)), from plier, ployer (“to bend, fold”), from plicāre (“to bend, fold, roll up”), from Proto-Indo-European *pleḱ- (“to fold, plait, weave”).
Related words
Derived words
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