STREET CORNER vs CORNER: NOUN
- The intersection of two streets
- A speculative monopoly of a stock or commodity created by purchasing all or most of the available supply in order to raise its price.
- A remote, secluded, or secret place.
- A threatening or embarrassing position from which escape is difficult.
- A cornerback.
- A corner kick in soccer.
- Either side of home plate, toward or away from the batter.
- Any of the four angles of a boxing or wrestling ring where the ropes are joined.
- The place where two roads or streets join or intersect.
- The area enclosed or bounded by an angle formed in this manner.
- Exclusive possession; monopoly.
- A small concavity
- A temporary monopoly on a kind of commercial trade
- A predicament from which a skillful or graceful escape is impossible
- A projecting part that is corner-shaped
- The point where three areas or surfaces meet or intersect
- A remote area
- A place off to the side of an area
- The point where two lines meet or intersect
- An interior angle formed be two meeting walls
- (architecture) solid exterior angle of a building; especially one formed by a cornerstone
- The intersection of two streets
- The position at which two lines, surfaces, or edges meet and form an angle.
- In bookbinding: A triangular tool used for decorating the corners of a book. Also corner-piece. The leather or other material used in the corners of a half-bound book, One of the metal guards used to protect the corners of heavily bound books.
- The end, extremity, or margin.
- Indefinitely, any part, even the least and most remote or concealed: used emphatically, involving the inclusion of all parts: as, they searched every corner of the forest.
- Hence A narrow space partly inclosed; a small secret or retired place.
- The space between two converging lines or surfaces; specifically, the space near their intersection: as, the four corners of a room.
- The intersection of two converging lines or surfaces; an angle, whether internal or external: as, the corner of a building; the four corners of a square; the corner of two streets.
- In field hockey, a free hit against the defending side, made within three feet of the nearest corner flag.
- In mathematics, a vertex or summit of a polyhedron.
- Specifically, a projecting angle in the side of an instrument of the viol family. In instruments of the true violin group there are two corners on each side, between which is the concave indentation called the waist. See block, 19.
- A metallic cap or guard used to protect the corners of furniture, trunks, boxes, etc.
- In surveying, a mark placed at a corner of a surveyed tract.
- A monopolizing of the marketable supply of a stock or commodity, through purchases for immediate or future delivery, generally by a secretly organized combination, for the purpose of raising the price: as, a corner in wheat.
- A free kick from close to the nearest corner flag post, allowed to the opposite side when a player has sent the ball behind his own goal line.
- The point where two converging lines meet; an angle, either external or internal.
- The space in the angle between converging lines or walls which meet in a point.
- An edge or extremity; the part farthest from the center; hence, any quarter or part.
- A secret or secluded place; a remote or out of the way place; a nook.
- A part or piece made to fit on a corner, as in mounting or for protection.
- Direction; quarter.
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Located at a street corner.
- Designed for use in a corner.
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: VERB
- N/A
- Force a person or an animal into a position from which he cannot escape
- Turn a corner
- Gain control over
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To place or drive into a corner.
- To form a corner in (a stock or commodity).
- To furnish with corners.
- To turn, as at a corner.
- To come together or be situated on or at a corner.
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To drive into a corner.
- To drive into a position of great difficulty or hopeless embarrassment.
- To get command of (a stock, commodity, etc.), so as to be able to put one's own price on it.
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- A projecting part where two sides or edges meet
- An interior angle formed by two meeting walls
- To drive or force into a corner, or into a place whence there is no escape.
- To drive or force into a position of great difficulty; force into a position where failure, defeat, or surrender is inevitable; place in a situation from which escape is impossible: as, to corner a person in an argument.
- To meet in a corner or angle; form a corner.
- To be situated on or at a corner; impinge or be connected at an angle: as, the house corners on the main street, or (when standing cornerwise) to the street or road; Sweden corners on Russia at the north.
- In making turpentine, to cut out a triangular shallow chip above each of the two corners of the box, to prepare the tree for chipping and to direct the flow of resin into the box.
- (idiom) (around the corner) About to happen; imminent.
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: RELATED WORDS
- Pedestrian, Road hog, Pedestrianize, Service area, Local road, Belisha beacon, Sidewalk, Tree lawn, Bystreet, Safety island, Yellow line, Pedestrian traffic, Street sign, Turning point, Corner
- Block, Front, Edge, Alley, Angle, Intersection, Side, Street corner, Quoin, Recession, Recess, Niche, Turning point, Box, Nook
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Telephone pole, Pedestrian, Road hog, Pedestrianize, Service area, Local road, Belisha beacon, Sidewalk, Tree lawn, Bystreet, Safety island, Yellow line, Pedestrian traffic, Street sign, Corner
- Turn, Doorstep, Spot, Wall, Block, Front, Edge, Angle, Intersection, Side, Street corner, Recession, Niche, Box, Nook
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- They would erect billboards on every street corner.
- Several street corner meetings and intense campaigns followed.
- Heidi Mann, left, and Ken Lippincott, right, participate in a street corner ministry at Main Street and Ohio Avenue in Fountain last Thursday.
- Alleyway beside the firehouse Sneak through from either the Kogan Plaza or the G Street side instead of walking to a street corner.
- Second Street, Corner of Jefferson and Second Street.
- Located on a street corner this retail property is visible and well positioned in the street.
- On corner lots, the parking may not be located adjacent to the street corner.
- People park dangerously close to the Elaine Street Joan Street corner making driving dangerous.
- Pinatubo Street Corner Matulin Street, San Martin De Porres Cubao, Quezon.
- 200 Benavidez Street corner Salcedo Street Mia Marci likes sampling street food, even if she doesn't know what's in it.
- Numbered lines, from the top left corner to the bottom right corner doubled!
- Working corner to corner will help you achieve the beautiful diagonal stripes floating across this throw.
- This is a dainty corner to corner crochet afghan that works up very fast.
- We may examine the pictures from corner to corner and still be uncertain.
- This corner to corner crochet afghan is made using soft, chunky variegated yarn.
- Are they measured corner to corner on a diagonal or straight side?
- One corner of the easement shall betied to a property corner.
- Tiameter galvanized diagonal truss rods from corner to corner.
- HAVE to try Corner House Coffee around the corner.
- Adams, Berdines Corner, Black Horse, Bodines Corner, Franklin Park, Georges Road, Livingston Park, Maple Meade, Patricks Corner and Red Lion.
STREET CORNER vs CORNER: QUESTIONS
- How much would you pay for a street corner prostitute?
- Why choose creavit corner vitroya 45x45 cm washbasin?
- Are there public restrooms in Tysons Corner Center?
- Does Aladdin falafel corner offer takeout services?
- Who makes round corner rectangular aluminum tubing?
- Is Seasons 52-Tysons Corner accepting reservations?
- What are wallprotex plastic wall corner protectors?
- Is corner radius animatable in animatewithduration?
- Why 9th corner is the most important corner of a structure?
- Is there a free pattern for corner to corner knitting?
- Can diagonal movement cross the corner of a corner?