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position
[ puh-zish-uhn ]
noun
- condition with reference to place; location; situation.
- a place occupied or to be occupied; site:
a fortified position.
- the proper, appropriate, or usual place:
out of position.
- situation or condition, especially with relation to favorable or unfavorable circumstances:
to be in an awkward position; to bargain from a position of strength.
- status or standing:
He has a position to maintain in the community.
Synonyms: rank
- high standing, as in society; important status:
a person of wealth and position.
- a post of employment:
a position in a bank.
- manner of being placed, disposed, or arranged:
the relative position of the hands of a clock.
Synonyms: arrangement, array, disposition, placement
- bodily posture or attitude:
to be in a sitting position.
- mental attitude; stand:
one's position on a controversial topic.
- the act of positing.
- something that is posited.
Synonyms: predication, principle, doctrine, contention, assertion, dictum, thesis, postulate, hypothesis, proposition
- Ballet. any of the five basic positions of the feet with which every step or movement begins and ends. Compare first position, second position, third position, fourth position, fifth position.
- Music.
- the arrangement of tones in a chord, especially with regard to the location of the root tone in a triad or to the distance of the tones from each other. Compare close position, inversion ( def 8a ), open position, root position.
- any of the places on the fingerboard of a stringed instrument where the fingers stop the strings to produce the variouspitches.
- any of the places to which the slide of a trombone is shifted to produce changes in pitch.
- Finance. a commitment to buy or sell securities:
He took a large position in defense stocks.
- Classical Prosody. the situation of a short vowel before two or more consonants or their equivalent, making the syllable metrically long.
verb (used with object)
- to put in a particular or appropriate position; place.
Synonyms: situate
- to determine the position of; locate.
position
/ pəˈzɪʃən /
noun
- the place, situation, or location of a person or thing
he took up a position to the rear
- the appropriate or customary location
the telescope is in position for use
- the arrangement or disposition of the body or a part of the body
the corpse was found in a sitting position
- the manner in which a person or thing is placed; arrangement
- military an area or point occupied for tactical reasons
- mental attitude; point of view; stand
what's your position on this issue?
- social status or standing, esp high social standing
- a post of employment; job
- the act of positing a fact or viewpoint
- something posited, such as an idea, proposition, etc
- sport the part of a field or playing area where a player is placed or where he generally operates
- music
- the vertical spacing or layout of the written notes in a chord. Chords arranged with the three upper voices close together are in close position . Chords whose notes are evenly or widely distributed are in open position See also root position
- one of the points on the fingerboard of a stringed instrument, determining where a string is to be stopped
- in classical prosody
- the situation in which a short vowel may be regarded as long, that is, when it occurs before two or more consonants
- (of a consonant, either on its own or in combination with other consonants, such as x in Latin) to cause a short vowel to become metrically long when placed after it
- finance the market commitment of a dealer in securities, currencies, or commodities
a long position
a short position
- in a positionfoll by an infinitive able (to)
I'm not in a position to reveal these figures
verb
- to put in the proper or appropriate place; locate
- sport to place (oneself or another player) in a particular part of the field or playing area
- to put (someone or something) in a position (esp in relation to others) that confers a strategic advantage: he's trying to position himself for a leadership bid
- marketing to promote (a product or service) by tailoring it to the needs of a specific market or by clearly differentiating it from its competitors (e.g. in terms of price or quality)
- rare.to locate or ascertain the position of
Derived Forms
- poˈsitional, adjective
Other Words From
- po·sition·al adjective
- po·sition·less adjective
- mispo·sition verb (used with object)
- well-po·sitioned adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of position1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Satirists occupy a perilous position—to skewer dogma and cant, and to antagonize the establishment while needing its protection.
You have to acknowledge your age and position in life, for me quite a lot of those emotionally fueled songs were hormone songs.
If the ball goes off the screen, it teleports back to the starting position.
In a 2009 interview, Church apostle Dallin H. Oaks held that the Church “does not have a position” on that point.
And by the time an airplane was in the water, its exact position would be known.
In this position, the line of cavalry formed the chord of the arc described by the river, and occupied by us.
Polavieja, as everybody knew, was the chosen executive of the friars, whose only care was to secure their own position.
Cousin George's position is such a happy one, that conversation is to him a thing superfluous.
It is only necessary to have a zinc, or a galvanized tray on which to stand the glass in an inverted position.
The case may be kept in a light position, and when once under way it will rarely need any additional water.
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