amerikai:
brit:
1. The World Wide Web.
Some of that content is now only available on the Web.
1. The silken structure which a spider builds using silk secreted from the spinnerets at the caudal tip of its abdomen; a spiderweb.
The sunlight glistened in the dew on the web.
2. (by extension) Any interconnected set of persons, places, or things, which when diagrammed resembles a spider's web.
3. (sometimes capitalized) Specifically, the World Wide Web.
Let me search the web for that.
4. The part of a baseball mitt between the forefinger and thumb, the webbing.
He caught the ball in the web.
5. A latticed or woven structure.
The gazebo's roof was a web made of thin strips of wood.
6. (usually with "spin", "weave", or similar verbs) A tall tale with more complexity than a myth or legend.
Careful—she knows how to spin a good web, but don't lean too hard on what she says.
Szinonimák: yarn
7. A plot or scheme.
8. The interconnection between flanges in structural members, increasing the effective lever arm and so the load capacity of the member.
9. The thinner vertical section of a railway rail between the top (head) and bottom (foot) of the rail.
10. A fold of tissue connecting the toes of certain birds, or of other animals.
11. The series of barbs implanted on each side of the shaft of a feather, whether stiff and united together by barbules, as in ordinary feathers, or soft and separate, as in downy feathers.
12. A continuous strip of material carried by rollers during processing.
13. (lithography) A long sheet of paper which is fed from a roll into a printing press, as opposed to individual sheets of paper.
14. A band of webbing used to regulate the extension of the hood of a carriage.
15. A thin metal sheet, plate, or strip, as of lead.
16. A major broadcasting network.
1. To construct or form a web.
2. To cover with a web or network.
3. To ensnare or entangle.
4. To provide with a web.
5. To weave.