point
nounThe sharp end of any instrument or body; as the point of a knife, of a sword or of a thorn.
point
A string with a tag; as a silken point.
point
A small cape, headland or promontory; a tract of land extending into the sea, a lake or river, beyond the line of the shore, and becoming narrow at the end; as point Judith; Montauk point. It is smaller than a cape.
point
The sting of an epigram; a lively turn of thought or expression that strikes with force and agreeable surprise. With periods, points and tropes he slurs his crimes.
point
An indivisible part of time or space. We say, a point of time, a point of space.
point
A small space; as a small point of land.
point
Punctilio; nicety; exactness of ceremony; as points of precedence.
point
Place near, next or contiguous to; verge; eve. He is on the point of departure, or at the point of death.
point
Exact place. He left off at the point where he began.
point
Degree; state of elevation, depression or extension; as, he has reached an extraordinary point of excellence. He has fallen to the lowest point of degradation.
point
A character used to mark the divisions of writing, or the pauses to be observed in reading or speaking; as the comma, semi-colon, colon and period. The period is called a full stop, as it marks the close of a sentence.
point
A spot; a part of a surface divided by spots or lines; as the ace or sise point.
point
In geometry, that which has neither parts nor magnitude. A point is that which has position but not magnitude. A point is a limit terminating a line.
point
In music, mark or note anciently used to distinguish tones or sounds. Hence, simple counterpoint is when a note of the lower part answers exactly to that of the upper, and figurative counterpoint, is when a note is syncopated and one of the parts makes several notes or inflections of the voice while the other holds on one.
point
In modern music, a dot placed by a note to raise its value or prolong its time by one half, so as to make a semibreve equal to three minims; a minim equal to three quavers.
point
In astronomy, a division of the great circles of the horizon, and of the mariner’s compass. The four cardinal points, are the east, west, north and south. On the space between two of these points, making a quadrant or quarter of a circle, the compass is marked with subordinate divisions, the whole number being thirty two points.
point
In astronomy, a certain place marked in the heavens, or distinguished for its importance in astronomical calculations. The zenith and nadir are called vertical points; the nodes are the points where the orbits of the planets intersect the plane of the ecliptic; the place where the equator and ecliptic intersect are called equinoctial points; the points of the ecliptic at which the departure of the sun from the equator, north and south, is terminated, are called solstitial points.
point
In perspective, a certain pole or place with regard to the perspective plane.
point
In manufactories, a lace or work wrought by the needle; as point le Venice, point de GenoaSometimes the word is used for lace woven with bobbins. Point devise is used for needle work, or for nice work.
point
The place to which any thing is directed, or the direction in which an object is presented to the eye. We say, in this point of view, an object appears to advantage. In this or that point of view, the evidence is important.