- nouncard (noun) · cards (plural noun)
- a piece of thick, stiff paper or thin pasteboard, in particular one used for writing or printing on:"some notes jotted down on a card"
- a piece of thick paper printed with a picture and used to send a message or greeting:"a birthday card"
- a small rectangular piece of thick paper with a person's name and other details printed on it for purposes of identification, for example a business card:"a membership card entitled you to library services" · "she dug into her bag and produced her card"
- a small rectangular piece of plastic containing personal data in a machine-readable form and used to obtain cash or credit or to pay for a phone call, gain entry to a room or building, etc.:"your card cannot be used to withdraw more than your daily limit from cash machines" · "she paid for the goods with her card"
- a playing card:"a deck of cards"
- (cards)a game played with playing cards:"they were playing interminable cards"
- computingshort for expansion card
- a program of events at a racetrack:"a nine-race card"
- a record of scores in a sporting event; a scorecard.
- informaldateda person regarded as odd or amusing:"He laughed, “You're a card, you know.”"
verbcard (verb) · cards (third person present) · carded (past tense) · carded (past participle) · carding (present participle)- write (something) on a card, especially for indexing.
- informal(in golf and other sports) score (a certain number of points on a scorecard):"he carded 68 in the final round"
- (of the referee in soccer and some other sports) show a yellow or red card to (a player who is being cautioned or sent off):"Reid, seconds after being carded, broke down the left wing" · "a Mac flanker was carded and sent to the sin bin in the first half"
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHcheck the identity card of (someone), in particular as evidence of legal drinking age:"we were carded at the entrance to the club"
Originlate Middle English (in sense 3 of the noun): from Old French carte, from Latin carta, charta, from Greek khartēs ‘papyrus leaf’.verbcard (verb) · cards (third person present) · carded (past tense) · carded (past participle) · carding (present participle)- comb and clean (raw wool, hemp fibers, or similar material) with a sharp-toothed instrument in order to disentangle the fibers before spinning:"the wool from the sheep was carded and spun"
nouncard (noun) · cards (plural noun)- a toothed implement or machine used to comb and clean raw fibers before spinning.
Originlate Middle English: from Old French carde, from Provençal carda, from cardar ‘tease, comb’, based on Latin carere ‘to card’.Similar and Opposite Wordsnoun- a piece of thick, stiff paper or thin pasteboard, in particular one used for writing or printing on:
- a small rectangular piece of plastic containing personal data in a machine-readable form and used to obtain cash or credit or to pay for a phone call, gain entry to a room or building, etc.:
- a playing card:
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Web[countable] a small piece of stiff paper or plastic with information on it, especially information about somebody’s identity. a membership card. an appointment card. She got her first library card at the age of seven. a …
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