DICT.TW Dictionary Taiwan
3.140.198.201

Search for:
[Show options]
[Pronunciation] [Help] [Database Info] [Server Info]

9 definitions found

From: DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典

 nee·dle /ˈnidḷ/
 針,尖(vt.)用針縫(vi.)縫紉

From: DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典

 nee·dle /ˈnɪdḷ/ 名詞
 針,針狀物,指針,注射針頭,針葉

From: Taiwan MOE computer dictionary

 needle
 針; 指針; 探針

From: Network Terminology

 needle
 針

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Nee·dle n.
 1. A small instrument of steel, sharply pointed at one end, with an eye to receive a thread, -- used in sewing.
 Note:In some needles (as for sewing machines) the eye is at the pointed end, but in ordinary needles it is at the blunt end.
 2. See Magnetic needle, under Magnetic.
 3. A slender rod or wire used in knitting; a knitting needle; also, a hooked instrument which carries the thread or twine, and by means of which knots or loops are formed in the process of netting, knitting, or crocheting.
 4. Bot. One of the needle-shaped secondary leaves of pine trees. See Pinus.
 5. Any slender, pointed object, like a needle, as a pointed crystal, a sharp pinnacle of rock, an obelisk, etc.
 Dipping needle. See under Dipping.
 Needle bar, the reciprocating bar to which the needle of a sewing machine is attached.
 Needle beam Arch., in shoring, the horizontal cross timber which goes through the wall or a pier, and upon which the weight of the wall rests, when a building is shored up to allow of alterations in the lower part.
 Needle furze Bot., a prickly leguminous plant of Western Europe; the petty whin (Genista Anglica).
 Needle gun, a firearm loaded at the breech with a cartridge carrying its own fulminate, which is exploded by driving a slender needle, or pin, into it. [archaic]
 Needle loom Weaving, a loom in which the weft thread is carried through the shed by a long eye-pointed needle instead of by a shuttle.
 Needle ore Min., acicular bismuth; a sulphide of bismuth, lead, and copper occuring in acicular crystals; -- called also aikinite.
 Needle shell Zool., a sea urchin.
 Needle spar Min., aragonite.
 Needle telegraph, a telegraph in which the signals are given by the deflections of a magnetic needle to the right or to the left of a certain position.
 Sea needle Zool., the garfish.

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Nee·dle, v. t.
 1. To form in the shape of a needle; as, to needle crystals.

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Nee·dle, v. i. To form needles; to crystallize in the form of needles.
 

From: WordNet (r) 2.0

 needle
      n 1: as of a conifer [syn: acerate leaf]
      2: a slender pointer for indicating the reading on the scale of
         a measuring instrument
      3: a sharp pointed implement (usually steel)
      4: a stylus that formerly made sound by following a groove in a
         phonograph record [syn: phonograph needle]
      v 1: goad or provoke,as by constant criticism; "He needled her
           with his sarcastic remarks" [syn: goad]
      2: prick with a needle

From: Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary

 Needle
    used only in the proverb, "to pass through a needle's eye"
    (Matt. 19:24; Mark 10:25; Luke 18:25). Some interpret the
    expression as referring to the side gate, close to the principal
    gate, usually called the "eye of a needle" in the East; but it
    is rather to be taken literally. The Hebrew females were skilled
    in the use of the needle (Ex. 28:39; 26:36; Judg. 5:30).