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Meaning of Warp | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1 Standard
wɔːp

Definitions

  1. The state, quality, or condition of being twisted, physically or mentally:
    uncountable
  2. The state, quality, or condition of being physically bent or twisted out of shape.
    uncountable
  3. The state, quality, or condition of being deviant from what is right or proper morally or mentally.
    uncountable
  4. A distortion or twist, such as in a piece of wood (also used figuratively).
    countable
  5. A distortion:
    countable
  6. A mental or moral distortion, deviation, or aberration.
    countable
  7. The threads that run lengthwise in a woven fabric; crossed by the woof or weft.
    countable, uncountable
  8. The foundation, the basis, the undergirding.
    countable, figuratively, uncountable
  9. A line or cable or rode as is used in warping (mooring or hauling) a ship, and sometimes for other purposes such as deploying a seine or creating drag.
    countable, uncountable
  10. A theoretical construct that permits travel across a medium without passing through it normally, such as a teleporter or time warp.
    countable, uncountable
  11. A situation or place which is or seems to be from another era; a time warp.
    countable, uncountable
  12. The sediment which subsides from turbid water; the alluvial deposit of muddy water artificially introduced into low lands in order to enrich or fertilise them.
    countable, uncountable
  13. A throw or cast, as of fish (in which case it is used as a unit of measure: about four fish, though sometimes three or even two), oysters, etc.
    countable, dialectal, obsolete, uncountable

Equivalents

العربية الإعوجاج سداة
Български осно́ва
Bosanski osnova основа
Čeština deformace osnova
Ελληνικά ιστός
فارسی تار
Gaeilge deilbh dlúth
עברית שתי
हिन्दी तंत्र ताना
Hrvatski osnova основа
Magyar csavar görbít görbület hajlít
Հայերեն առէջ
Bahasa Indonesia benang lungsin lungsin pelintiran
日本語 ワープ 縦糸
한국어
Kurdî aho
Latina stamen
Te Reo Māori aho io whenu
Македонски основа
Română natră urzeală
Српски osnova основа
Svenska förvrida
Türkçe bozulma deformasyon eğrilik yamukluk
Tiếng Việt canh

Examples

“All frames found to suffer from warp should be broken up straight away before the printer is tempted during a rush to make use of them.”
“Rough lumber is rarely perfectly straight, and may suffer from warp,”
“The part is not fragile, does not need benching to remove "stair-stepping" on curved surfaces and does not need post curing. It does not suffer from warp, sag or curl.”
“[…] and Senft found that the fibril angle in both the Pinus and Populus was high in juvenile wood, indicating that both are likely to exhibit warp in drying.”
“He believed that we were suffering from warp or bias, that a blind spot contorted our mental vision.”
“[…] and may discover that the potency of this politician-father had so altered the freedom with which corrective authority could be imposed on his son that to an extraordinary extent the person as an adult continues to suffer from warp acquired at home as a child.”
“Wills, too, was struck down by a pole but was saved because a warp in the wood bent upwards, creating a pocket for his body.”
“In yet another ironic twist in a story richly endowed with such warps, the Tsar's telegram crossed one despatched in the other direction.”
“It is interesting to note that it has been suggested by Lugaro to partially extirpate the thyroid in cases of moral insanity; an excessive secretion of thyroid being regarded as the cause of excessive amativeness, thieving, and other mental warps […]”
“The sense of sin (enforced by piacular rites) is as important to social integration as the committing of crimes (in due proportion) which alone can cause the mobilization of moral values that is the warp of society and of human conscience.”
“This stretch is typical of the Piedmont section, where the warp of the economic structure is agriculture and the woof industry.”
“We finish’d the Raft that Night, and in the Morning sent Mr. Prat, our Chief Mate, and four Men in the Boat with a long Rope for a Warp, to fasten on the Land.”
“[…] trailed one of my sea anchors or at least some warps in order to ease the ship […]”
“If Times Square nevertheless remained a metaphor for the city's changing dynamics, it was stuck in a warp of immobility, unable to push itself forward as it had in the early part of the twentieth century.”
“Evolutionary psychology often seems to be stuck in a warp on the grassy African plains, even though we know that early humans didn't stay on the Savannah but moved from around 2 million years ago out of Africa into quite different terrains.”
“To succeed routinely at mind-reading or telekinesis or love charms would result in no learning, no amusement, no spiritual growth (for a companion parable, check out Bill Murray's Groundhog Day). We would be stuck in a warp […]”
“The silt is brought down and the strong tide of the Humber brings it up in very large quantities, so that the river the whole way through nearly is exceedingly thick. Added to that I may say that we suffer from warp to a tremendous extent.”
“a warp of fish”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
See all C1 English words →

See also

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