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pin
1[ pin ]
noun
- a small, slender, often pointed piece of wood, metal, etc., used to fasten, support, or attach things.
- a short, slender piece of wire with a point at one end and a head at the other, for fastening things together.
- any of various forms of fasteners or ornaments consisting essentially or partly of a pointed or penetrating wire or shaft (often used in combination):
a jeweled pin.
Synonyms: brooch
- a badge having a pointed bar or pin attached, by which it is fastened to the clothing:
a fraternity pin.
- Digital Technology. a photo or link that is bookmarked on Pinterest, a website and mobile application:
She added 5 pins to her recipes board.
- Machinery.
- a short metal rod, as a linchpin, driven through holes in adjacent parts, as a hub and an axle, to keep the parts together.
- a short axle, as one on which a pulley rotates in a block.
- the part of a cylindrical key stem entering a lock.
- a clothespin.
- a hairpin.
- a peg, nail, or stud marking the center of a target.
- Bowling. any one of the rounded wooden clubs set up as the target in tenpins, ninepins, duckpins, etc.
- Golf. the flag staff which identifies a hole.
- any of the projecting knobs or rails on a pinball machine that serve as targets for the ball.
- Informal. a human leg.
- Music. peg ( def 5 ).
- Wrestling. a fall.
- Nautical.
- an axle for a sheave of a block.
- Carpentry. a tenon in a dovetail joint; dovetail.
- a very small amount; a trifle:
Such insincere advice isn't worth a pin.
- Chess. the immobilization of an enemy piece by attacking with one's queen, rook, or bishop.
- Electronics. a pin-shaped connection, as the terminals on the base of an electron tube or the connections on an integrated circuit.
verb (used with object)
- to fasten or attach with or as with a pin or pins:
to pin two pieces of cloth together.
- to hold fast in a spot or position (sometimes followed by down ):
The debris pinned him down.
- to transfix or mount with a pin or the like:
to pin a flower as a botanical specimen.
- Chess. to immobilize (an enemy piece) by placing one's queen, rook, or bishop in a position to check the exposed king or capture a valuable piece if the pinned piece were moved.
- Wrestling. to secure a fall over one's opponent.
- Digital Technology.
- to bookmark (a photo or link) on Pinterest, a website and mobile application:
He pinned a jacket from Macy's on his fashion board.
- to fix (a social media post) to the top of a feed:
She pinned a tweet about her forthcoming book to the top of her Twitter feed.
verb (used without object)
- Digital Technology. to bookmark a photo or link on Pinterest:
I've been pinning a lot lately.
verb phrase
- to bind or hold to a course of action, a promise, etc.
- to force (someone) to deal with a situation or to come to a decision:
We tried to pin him down for a definite answer, but he was too evasive for us.
- to make (a piece of masonry) level or plumb with wedges.
- to fill (gaps in a rubble wall, etc.) with spalls.
PIN
2[ pin ]
noun
- a number assigned to an individual, used to establish identity in order to gain access to a computer system via an automatic teller machine, a point-of-sale terminal, or other device.
pin
1/ pɪn /
noun
- a short stiff straight piece of wire pointed at one end and either rounded or having a flattened head at the other: used mainly for fastening pieces of cloth, paper, etc, esp temporarily
- ( in combination )
pinhole
- an ornamental brooch, esp a narrow one
- a badge worn fastened to the clothing by a pin
- something of little or no importance (esp in the phrases not care or give a pin ( for ))
- a peg or dowel
- anything resembling a pin in shape, function, etc
- (in various bowling games) a usually club-shaped wooden object set up in groups as a target
- Also calledcotter pinsafety pin a clip on a hand grenade that prevents its detonation until removed or released
- nautical
- See belaying pin
- the axle of a sheave
- the sliding closure for a shackle
- music a metal tuning peg on a piano, the end of which is inserted into a detachable key by means of which it is turned
- surgery a metal rod, esp of stainless steel, for holding together adjacent ends of fractured bones during healing
- chess a position in which a piece is pinned against a more valuable piece or the king
- golf the flagpole marking the hole on a green
- the cylindrical part of a key that enters a lock
- the cylindrical part of a lock where this part of the key fits
- wrestling a position in which a person is held tight or immobile, esp with both shoulders touching the ground
- a dovetail tenon used to make a dovetail joint
- (in Britain) a miniature beer cask containing 4 1 2 gallons
- informal.usually plural a leg
- be put to the pin on one's collarto be forced to make an extreme effort
verb
- to attach, hold, or fasten with or as if with a pin or pins
- to transfix with a pin, spear, etc
- informal.foll by on to place (the blame for something)
he pinned the charge on his accomplice
- chess to cause (an enemy piece) to be effectively immobilized by attacking it with a queen, rook, or bishop so that moving it would reveal a check or expose a more valuable piece to capture
- Alsounderpin to support (masonry), as by driving in wedges over a beam
PIN
2/ pɪn /
acronym for
- personal identification number: a number used by a holder of a cash card or credit card used in EFTPOS
Other Words From
- re·pin verb (used with object) repinned repinning
Word History and Origins
Origin of pin1
Origin of pin2
Word History and Origins
Origin of pin1
Idioms and Phrases
- get pinned,
- (of a young woman) to receive a male student's fraternity pin as a symbol of his affection and fidelity, usually symbolizing that the couple is going steady or plans to become engaged.
- (of a young couple) to become formally pledged to one another, though not yet engaged, by the bestowing of such a pin or the exchange of pins.
- pin something on someone, Informal. to ascribe the blame or guilt for something to a person; show someone to be culpable:
They pinned the crime on him.
- pull the pin, Informal. to end a relationship, project, program, or the like, because of lack of continuing interest, success, funds, etc.
More idioms and phrases containing pin
- hear a pin drop
- on pins and needles
Example Sentences
He had suffered a double leg break, which required extensive surgery to fit pins and rods.
There was a noticeable 'you can hear a pin drop' moment when the slap occurred.
Hopes for the future appear to be pinned on doing a deal with the American financier Jason Mudrick, who is already a major creditor through his firm Mudrick Capital Management.
The court previously heard a bloodstained cricket bat, a rolling pin with Sara’s DNA on it, a metal pole, a belt and rope were found near the family’s outhouse.
Then I bought some pins that I used as detailing on the chairs, and these press credentials for photography, which are on one side of the chair.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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