edged

Variant of edge

noun

  1. the thin, sharp, cutting part of a blade
  2. the quality of being sharp or keen
  3. the projecting ledge or brink, as of a cliff
  4. the part farthest from the middle; line where something begins or ends; border, or part nearest the border; margin
  5. the verge or brink, as of a condition
  6. an intense, harsh, or irritable quality: his voice had a distinct edge
  7. Geom. a line or line segment at which two plane surfaces meet
  8. Informal advantage: you have an edge on me
  9. Informal the quality of being edgy (sense )

Origin: ME egge < OE ecg, akin to ON egg, Ger ecke, corner < IE base *ak-, sharp: see acid

transitive verb edged, edging

    1. to form or put an edge on; provide an edge for
    2. to trim the edge of
  1. to make (one's way) sideways, as through a crowd
  2. to move gradually or cautiously
  3. Informal to defeat in a contest by a narrow margin: often with out
  4. Skiing to tilt (a ski) so that one edge bites into the snow, as in traversing a slope

intransitive verb

  1. to move sideways
  2. to move gradually or cautiously: to edge away from danger

Related Forms:

Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2010 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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