row

[ US /ˈɹoʊ/ ]
NOUN
  1. an angry dispute
    they had words
    they had a quarrel
  2. a long continuous strip (usually running horizontally)
    a mackerel sky filled with rows of clouds
    rows of barbed wire protected the trenches
  3. an arrangement of objects or people side by side in a line
    a row of chairs
  4. (construction) a layer of masonry
    a course of bricks
  5. the act of rowing as a sport
  6. a linear array of numbers, letters, or symbols side by side
  7. a continuous chronological succession without an interruption
    they won the championship three years in a row
VERB
  1. propel with oars
    row the boat across the lake
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How To Use row In A Sentence

  • The buildings are usually gabled, with rows of tiles along the ridges of the roofs.
  • Some were members of Turkey's elite military class known as "pashas," a title of respect harking back to Ottoman military commanders Monday for allegedly planning to blow up mosques in order to trigger a military takeover and overthrow the WN.com - Photown News
  • The lizard's light brown skin acts as camouflage in the desert sand.
  • Elisabeth found herself with a straggle of colonists in a mosquito-ridden, uncleared jungle where sandflies bored into the skin of the feet and the clay soil was so intractable that nothing would grow.
  • The air had grown thick and smoky.
  • The protests were going on about 1 kilometers away in the main street and some of the protesting crowd were running from tear gass used among them, towards Salehi St. The film is shot by my friend who was standing beside me. Iran Election Live-Blogging (Saturday June 20 Part II)
  • Rows of brick garden apartments all backed onto a massive common garden: a shared backyard for children to play, dogs to gambol, and families to eat picnics together. Day of Honey
  • The extended period of damage was probably brought on by the cool/wet growing conditions.
  • So, did it take a row over a ban on journalists to enable him to penetrate the secret that the regime is not a model of benignity?
  • So spake he, and Athene was mightily angered at heart, and chid Odysseus in wrathful words: ‘Odysseus, thou hast no more steadfast might nor any prowess, as when for nine whole years continually thou didst battle with the Trojans for high born Helen, of the white arms, and many men thou slewest in terrible warfare, and by thy device the wide-wayed city of Priam was taken. Book XXII
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