[syn: heave, buckle, warp]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Warp \Warp\, v. i.
1. To turn, twist, or be twisted out of shape; esp., to be
twisted or bent out of a flat plane; as, a board warps in
seasoning or shrinking.
[1913 Webster]
One of you will prove a shrunk panel, and, like
green timber, warp, warp. --Shak.
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They clamp one piece of wood to the end of another,
to keep it from casting, or warping. --Moxon.
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2. to turn or incline from a straight, true, or proper
course; to deviate; to swerve.
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There is our commission,
From which we would not have you warp. --Shak.
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3. To fly with a bending or waving motion; to turn and wave,
like a flock of birds or insects.
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A pitchy cloud
Of locusts, warping on the eastern wind. --Milton.
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4. To cast the young prematurely; to slink; -- said of
cattle, sheep, etc. [Prov. Eng.]
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5. (Weaving) To wind yarn off bobbins for forming the warp of
a web; to wind a warp on a warp beam.
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The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Warp \Warp\ (w[add]rp), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Warped
(w[add]rpt); p. pr. & vb. n. Warping.] [OE. warpen; fr.
Icel. varpa to throw, cast, varp a casting, fr. verpa to
throw; akin to Dan. varpe to warp a ship, Sw. varpa, AS.
weorpan to cast, OS. werpan, OFries. werpa, D. & LG. werpen,
G. werfen, Goth. wa['i]rpan; cf. Skr. v[.r]j to twist.
[root]144. Cf. Wrap.]
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1. To throw; hence, to send forth, or throw out, as words; to
utter. [Obs.] --Piers Plowman.
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2. To turn or twist out of shape; esp., to twist or bend out
of a flat plane by contraction or otherwise.
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The planks looked warped. --Coleridge.
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Walter warped his mouth at this
To something so mock solemn, that I laughed.
--Tennyson.
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3. To turn aside from the true direction; to cause to bend or
incline; to pervert.
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This first avowed, nor folly warped my mind.
--Dryden.
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I have no private considerations to warp me in this
controversy. --Addison.
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We are divested of all those passions which cloud
the intellects, and warp the understandings, of men.
--Southey.
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4. To weave; to fabricate. [R. & Poetic.] --Nares.
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While doth he mischief warp. --Sternhold.
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5. (Naut.) To tow or move, as a vessel, with a line, or warp,
attached to a buoy, anchor, or other fixed object.
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6. To cast prematurely, as young; -- said of cattle, sheep,
etc. [Prov. Eng.]
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7. (Agric.) To let the tide or other water in upon (lowlying
land), for the purpose of fertilization, by a deposit of
warp, or slimy substance. [Prov. Eng.]
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8. (Rope Making) To run off the reel into hauls to be tarred,
as yarns.
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9. (Weaving) To arrange (yarns) on a warp beam.
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10. (Aeronautics) To twist the end surfaces of (an aerocurve
in an airfoil) in order to restore or maintain
equilibrium.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]
Warped surface (Geom.), a surface generated by a straight
line moving so that no two of its consecutive positions
shall be in the same plane. --Davies & Peck.
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The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Warp \Warp\, n. [AS. wearp; akin to Icel. varp a casting,
throwing, Sw. varp the draught of a net, Dan. varp a towline,
OHG. warf warp, G. werft. See Warp, v.]
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1. (Weaving) The threads which are extended lengthwise in the
loom, and crossed by the woof.
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2. (Naut.) A rope used in hauling or moving a vessel, usually
with one end attached to an anchor, a post, or other fixed
object; a towing line; a warping hawser.
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3. (Agric.) A slimy substance deposited on land by tides,
etc., by which a rich alluvial soil is formed. --Lyell.
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4. A premature casting of young; -- said of cattle, sheep,
etc. [Prov. Eng.]
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5. Four; esp., four herrings; a cast. See Cast, n., 17.
[Prov. Eng.] --Wright.
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6. [From Warp, v.] The state of being warped or twisted;
as, the warp of a board.
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Warp beam, the roller on which the warp is wound in a loom.
Warp fabric, fabric produced by warp knitting.
Warp frame, or Warp-net frame, a machine for making warp
lace having a number of needles and employing a thread for
each needle.
Warp knitting, a kind of knitting in which a number of
threads are interchained each with one or more contiguous
threads on either side; -- also called warp weaving.
Warp lace, or Warp net, lace having a warp crossed by
weft threads.
[1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
warp
n 1: a twist or aberration; especially a perverse or abnormal
way of judging or acting [syn: deflection, warp]
2: a shape distorted by twisting or folding [syn: warp,
buckle]
3: a moral or mental distortion [syn: warp, warping]
4: yarn arranged lengthways on a loom and crossed by the woof
v 1: make false by mutilation or addition; as of a message or
story [syn: falsify, distort, garble, warp]
2: bend out of shape, as under pressure or from heat; "The
highway buckled during the heat wave" [syn: heave,
buckle, warp]
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0:
370 Moby Thesaurus words for "warp":
a thing for, aberrancy, aberration, adulterate, affinity, alloy,
alter, ameliorate, anamorphism, anamorphosis, animus, aptitude,
aptness, asymmetry, bastardize, be changed, be converted into,
be renewed, belie, bend, bend to, bent, bias, birthmark, blackhead,
bleb, blemish, blister, board, boom, bottom out, branching off,
break, brutalize, buckle, bulla, burlesque, camouflage, canker,
caricature, cast, cast loose, change, character, cheapen, check,
checker, chop, chop and change, cicatrix, cicatrize,
circuitousness, clap on ratlines, clear hawse, coarsen, color,
come about, come around, come round, comedo, conatus, conduce,
conduciveness, confound, confuse, constitution, contaminate,
contort, contortion, contribute, corner, corrupt, crack, crater,
craze, crook, crookedness, crumple, curve, cut loose, debase,
debauch, declination, deface, defacement, defect, defile, deflect,
deflower, deform, deformation, deformity, degenerate, degrade,
delight, demoralize, denature, departure, deprave, desecrate,
despoil, deteriorate, detorsion, detour, devalue, deviance,
deviancy, deviate, deviation, deviousness, diathesis, diffract,
diffuse, digression, discursion, disfiguration, disfigure,
disfigurement, disguise, disperse, dispose, disposition,
disproportion, distort, distortion, divagation, divarication,
diverge, divergence, diversify, diversion, divert, dogleg, double,
dress up, drift, drifting, eagerness, eccentricity, embellish,
embroider, errantry, exaggerate, excursion, excursus, exorbitation,
falsify, fault, feeling for, filling, flaw, flop, freckle, fudge,
garble, gild, gloss, gloss over, gnarl, go, grain, hairpin, haul,
haul around, haul down, have a tendency, head, heave, heave apeak,
heave round, heave short, hemangioma, hickey, idiosyncrasy,
imbalance, improve, inclination, incline, indirection,
individualism, infect, irregularity, jaundice, jibe, kedge, keloid,
kidney, kink, knot, lay, lay aloft, lead, lean, leaning, lentigo,
liability, liking, log, look to, lopsidedness, lurch, make, makeup,
mar, mask, meliorate, mental set, mettle, milium, mind, mind-set,
miscite, miscolor, misquote, misreport, misrepresent, misshape,
misstate, misteach, misuse, mitigate, modulate, mold, mole, mutate,
nature, needle scar, nevus, obliquity, overdraw, overstate, parody,
penchant, pererration, pervert, pick, pimple, pit, pock, pockmark,
point, point to, poison, pollute, port-wine mark, port-wine stain,
predilection, predisposition, preference, prejudice,
prejudice against, prejudice the issue, prepossess, probability,
proclivity, proneness, propensity, prostitute, pull, pustule,
quirk, rambling, ratline down, ravage, ravish, readiness,
redound to, refract, revive, rift, scab, scar, scarify, scatter,
scratch, screw, sebaceous cyst, sensitivity to, serve, set,
set toward, sheer, shift, shifting, shifting course, shifting path,
shoot, show a tendency, skew, slant, slue, soft spot, spar down,
split, spring, stamp, strain, strawberry mark, straying, streak,
stream the log, stripe, sty, susceptibility, sweep, swerve,
swerving, swinging, tack, taint, take a turn, temper, temperament,
tend, tendency, titivate, torsion, tortuosity, torture, track,
traverse a yard, travesty, trend, trick out, tropism, turn,
turn aside, turn awry, turn into, turn of mind, turn the corner,
turning, twist, type, ulcerate, undergo a change, understate,
unlash, unsymmetry, variation, varnish, vary, veer, verge, verruca,
vesicle, violate, vitiate, vulgarize, wale, wandering, wart,
weakness, weal, weft, welt, wen, whitehead, whitewash, willingness,
wind, woof, work toward, worsen, wrench, wrest, wring, writhe, yaw,
zigzag
V.E.R.A. -- Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms (February 2016):
WARP
Windows Advanced Rasterization Platform (MS, Windows)
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):
OS/2
Merlin
Warp
/O S too/ IBM and Microsoft's successor to the MS-DOS
operating system for Intel 80286 and Intel 80386-based
microprocessors. It is proof that they couldn't get it
right the second time either. Often called "Half-an-OS". The
design was so baroque, and the implementation of 1.x so bad,
that 3 years after introduction you could still count the
major application programs shipping for it on the fingers of
two hands, in unary. Later versions improved somewhat, and
informed hackers now rate them superior to Microsoft
Windows, which isn't saying much. See second-system
effect.
On an Intel 80386 or better, OS/2 can multitask between
existing MS-DOS applications. OS/2 is strong on
connectivity and the provision of robust virtual machines.
It can support Microsoft Windows programs in addition to its
own native applications. It also supports the Presentation
Manager graphical user interface.
OS/2 supports hybrid multiprocessing (HMP), which provides
some elements of symmetric multiprocessing (SMP), using
add-on IBM software called MP/2. OS/2 SMP was planned for
release in late 1993.
After OS/2 1.x the IBM and Microsoft partnership split.
IBM continued to develop OS/2 2.0, while Microsoft developed
what was originally intended to be OS/2 3.0 into Windows NT.
In October 1994, IBM released version OS/2 3.0 (known as
"Warp") but it is only distantly related to Windows NT.
This version raised the limit on RAM from 16MB to 1GB (like
Windows NT).
IBM introduced networking with "OS/2 Warp Connect", the first
multi-user version. OS/2 Warp 4.0 ("Merlin") is a network
operating system.
(http://mit.edu:8001/activities/os2/os2world.html).
[Dates?]
[Jargon File]
(1995-07-20)