what does a corner mean - Search
  1. Dictionary

    cor·ner
    [ˈkôrnər]
    noun
    corner (noun) · corners (plural noun)
    1. a place or angle where two or more sides or edges meet:
      "Jan sat at one corner of the table"
      • an area inside a room, box, or square-shaped space, near the place where two or more edges or surfaces meet:
        "he drove the ball into the corner of the net"
      • a place where two streets meet:
        "an apartment on the corner of 199th Street and Amsterdam Avenue" · "the corner house"
      • a difficult or awkward situation:
        "he found himself backed into a corner"
      • first or third base on a baseball diamond:
        "two outs, with runners on the corners"
      • a sharp bend in a road:
        "serious racers want a car that is fast going into and out of the corners"
    2. a part, region, or area, especially one regarded as secluded or remote:
      "they descended on the college from all corners of the world" · "his wisdom was disseminated to the four corners of the earth" · "parents are often tempted to resort to snooping and prying into every corner to make sure their children are safe"
      • a position in which one dominates the supply of a particular commodity.
    3. short for corner kick
    4. boxing
      wrestling
      each of the diagonally opposite ends of the ring, where a contestant rests between rounds.
      • a contestant's supporters or seconds:
        "Hodkinson was encouraged by his corner"
    5. baseball
      each of the two parallel sides of home plate, which are perceived as defining the vertical edges of the strike zone.
    verb
    corner (verb) · corners (third person present) · cornered (past tense) · cornered (past participle) · cornering (present participle)
    1. force (a person or animal) into a place or situation from which it is hard to escape:
      "the man was eventually cornered by police dogs"
      • detain (someone) in conversation, typically against their will:
        "I managed to corner Gary for fifteen minutes"
    2. control (a market) by dominating the supply of a particular commodity:
      "whether they will corner the market in graphics software remains to be seen"
      • establish a corner in (a commodity):
        "you cornered vanadium and made a killing"
    3. (of a vehicle) go around a bend in a road:
      "no squeal is evident from the tires when cornering fast"
    Origin
    Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French, based on Latin cornu ‘horn, tip, corner’.
    cor·ner kick
    [ˈkôrnər kik]
    noun
    corner (noun)
    1. a place kick taken by the attacking side from a corner of the field after the ball has been sent over the end line outside the goal by a defender:
      "Kavanagh lofted a corner kick"
    Translate corner to
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    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. force (a person or animal) into a place or situation from which it is hard to escape:
      • control (a market) by dominating the supply of a particular commodity:
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      2. People also ask
         
      3. corner A corner is a place where two sides or edges of something meet. You usually say that something is in a corner. Put the television set in the corner. Flowers were growing in one corner of the garden. When two streets meet, you refer to each of the places where their edges meet as a corner.
        www.thefreedictionary.com/corner
        corner (kɔːʳnəʳ) countable noun A corner is a point or an area where two or more edges, sides, or surfaces of something join.
        www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/right-…
        A corner is a point or an area where two or more edges, sides, or surfaces of something join. He saw the corner of a magazine sticking out from under the blanket. [ + of] Write 'By Airmail' in the top left-hand corner.
        www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/corner
        the place at which two converging lines or surfaces meet. the space between two converging lines or surfaces near their intersection; angle: a chair in the corner of the room. adjective situated on or at a corner where two streets meet: a corner drugstore.
        www.dictionary.com/browse/corner

        Britannica Dictionary definition of CORNER [count] 1 : the point or area where two lines, edges, or sides of something meet the corner of a box/table/tablecloth A post marks the corner of the property.

        www.britannica.com/dictionary/corner
         
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