• Noun

    a line or border at which a surface terminates
    Grass grew along the edges of the road. The paper had deckle edges.
    a brink or verge
    the edge of a cliff; the edge of disaster.
    any of the narrow surfaces of a thin, flat object
    a book with gilt edges.
    a line at which two surfaces of a solid object meet
    an edge of a box.
    the thin, sharp side of the blade of a cutting instrument or weapon.
    the sharpness proper to a blade
    The knife has lost its edge.
    sharpness or keenness of language, argument, tone of voice, appetite, desire, etc.
    The snack took the edge off his hunger. Her voice had an edge to it.
    British Dialect . a hill or cliff.
    an improved position; advantage
    He gained the edge on his opponent.
    Cards .
    advantage, esp. the advantage gained by being the age or eldest hand.
    eldest hand.
    Ice Skating . one of the two edges of a skate blade where the sides meet the bottom surface, made sharp by carving a groove on the bottom.
    Skiing . one of the two edges on the bottom of a ski that is angled into a slope when making a turn.

    Verb (used with object)

    to put an edge on; sharpen.
    to provide with an edge or border
    to edge a terrace with shrubbery; to edge a skirt with lace.
    to make or force (one's way) gradually by moving sideways.
    Metalworking .
    to turn (a piece to be rolled) onto its edge.
    to roll (a piece set on edge).
    to give (a piece) a desired width by passing between vertical rolls.
    to rough (a piece being forged) so that the bulk is properly distributed for final forging.

    Verb (used without object)

    to move sideways
    to edge through a crowd.
    to advance gradually or cautiously
    a car edging up to a curb.

    Verb phrases

    edge in, to insert or work in or into, esp. in a limited period of time
    Can you edge in your suggestion before they close the discussion?
    edge out, to defeat (rivals or opponents) by a small margin
    The home team edged out the visitors in an exciting finish.

    Idioms

    have an edge on
    Informal . to be mildly intoxicated with alcoholic liquor
    He had a pleasant edge on from the sherry.
    on edge
    (of a person or a person's nerves) acutely sensitive; nervous; tense.
    impatient; eager
    The contestants were on edge to learn the results.
    set one's teeth on edge. tooth ( def. 21 ) .

    tác giả


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