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fold
1[ fohld ]
verb (used with object)
- to bend (cloth, paper, etc.) over upon itself.
- to bring into a compact form by bending and laying parts together (often followed by up ):
to fold up a map; to fold one's legs under oneself.
He folded his arms on his chest.
- to bend or wind (usually followed by about, round, etc.):
to fold one's arms about a person's neck.
- to bring (the wings) close to the body, as a bird on alighting.
to fold something in paper.
- to embrace or clasp; enfold:
to fold someone in one's arms.
- Cards. to place (one's cards) facedown so as to withdraw from the play.
- Informal. to bring to an end; close up:
The owner decided to fold the business and retire.
verb (used without object)
- to be folded or be capable of folding:
The doors fold back.
- Cards. to place one's cards facedown so as to withdraw from the play.
- Informal. to fail in business; be forced to close:
The newspaper folded after 76 years.
- Informal. to yield or give in:
Dad folded and said we could go after all.
noun
folds of cloth.
- a crease made by folding:
He cut the paper along the fold.
- a hollow made by folding:
to carry something in the fold of one's dress.
- a hollow place in undulating ground:
a fold of the mountains.
- Geology. a portion of strata that is folded or bent, as an anticline or syncline, or that connects two horizontal or parallel portions of strata of different levels (as a monocline).
- Journalism.
- the line formed along the horizontal center of a standard-sized newspaper when it is folded after printing.
- a rough-and-ready dividing line, especially on the front page and other principal pages, between stories of primary and lesser importance.
- a coil of a serpent, string, etc.
- the act of folding or doubling over.
- Anatomy. a margin or ridge formed by the folding of a membrane or other flat body part; plica.
verb phrase
- Informal.
- to break down; collapse:
He folded up when the prosecutor discredited his story.
- to fail, especially to go out of business.
- Cooking. to mix in or add (an ingredient) by gently turning one part over another:
Fold in the egg whites.
fold
2[ fohld ]
noun
- an enclosure for sheep or, occasionally, other domestic animals.
- the sheep kept within it.
- a flock of sheep.
- a church.
- the members of a church; congregation:
He preached to the fold.
- a group sharing common beliefs, values, etc.:
He rejoined the fold after his youthful escapade.
verb (used with object)
- to confine (sheep or other domestic animals) in a fold.
-fold
3- a native English suffix meaning “of so many parts,” or denoting multiplication by the number indicated by the stem or word to which the suffix is attached:
twofold; manifold.
-fold
1suffix forming adjectives
- having so many parts, being so many times as much or as many, or multiplied by so much or so many
three-hundredfold
threefold
fold
2/ fəʊld /
noun
- a small enclosure or pen for sheep or other livestock, where they can be gathered
- the sheep or other livestock gathered in such an enclosure
- a flock of sheep
- a herd of Highland cattle
- a church or the members of it
- any group or community sharing a way of life or holding the same values
verb
- tr to gather or confine (sheep or other livestock) in a fold
fold
3/ fəʊld /
verb
- to bend or be bent double so that one part covers another
to fold a sheet of paper
- tr to bring together and intertwine (the arms, legs, etc)
she folded her hands
- tr (of birds, insects, etc) to close (the wings) together from an extended position
- tr; often foll by up or in to enclose in or as if in a surrounding material
- trfoll byin to clasp (a person) in the arms
- trusually foll byround, about, etc to wind (around); entwine
- poetic.tr to cover completely
night folded the earth
- Alsofold in tr to mix (a whisked mixture) with other ingredients by gently turning one part over the other with a spoon
- to produce a bend (in stratified rock) or (of stratified rock) to display a bend
- informal.introften foll byup to collapse; fail
the business folded
noun
- a piece or section that has been folded
a fold of cloth
- a mark, crease, or hollow made by folding
- a hollow in undulating terrain
- a bend in stratified rocks that results from movements within the earth's crust and produces such structures as anticlines and synclines
- anatomy another word for plica
- a coil, as in a rope, etc
- an act of folding
fold
/ fōld /
- A bend in a layer of rock or in another planar feature such as foliation or the cleavage of a mineral. Folds occur as the result of deformation, usually associated with plate-tectonic forces.
Derived Forms
- ˈfoldable, adjective
Other Words From
- folda·ble adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of fold1
Origin of fold2
Word History and Origins
Origin of fold1
Origin of fold2
Origin of fold3
Idioms and Phrases
- return to the fold
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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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