Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

warp

noun
Waurp.

warp

In manufactures, the threads, which are extended lengthwise in the loom, and crossed by the woof.

warp

Ina ship, a rope employed in drawing, towing or removing a ship or boat; a towing line.

warp

In agriculture, a slimy substance deposited on land by marine tides, by which a rich alluvial soil is formed.

warp

In cows, a miscarriage.

warp

verb intransitive
To turn, twist or be twisted out of a straight direction; as, a board warps in seasoning, or in the heat of the sun, by shrinking. They clamp one piece of wood to the end of another, to keep it from casting or warping.

warp

To turn or incline from a straight, true or proper course; to deviate. Theres our commission, from which we would not have you warp. Methinks my favor here begins to warp.

warp

To fly with a bending or waving motion; to turn and wave, like a flock of birds or insects. The following use of warp is inimitably beautiful. As when the potent rod of Amrams son, in Egypts evil day, wavd round the coast, up called a pitchy cloud of locusts, warping on the eastern wind-- .

warp

To slink; to cast the young prematurely; as cows. In an enclosure near a dog-kennel, eight heifers out of twenty warped.

warp

verb transitive
To turn or twist out of shape, or out of a straight direction, by contraction. The heat of the sun warps boards and timber.

warp

To turn aside from the true direction; to cause to bend or incline; to pervert. This first avowd, nor folly warpd my mind. I have no. private considerations to warp me in this controversy. --Zeal, to a degree of warmth able to warp the sacred rule of Gods word.

warp

In seamens language, to two or move with a line or warp, attached to buoys, to anchors or to other shipsBy which means a ship is drawn, usually in a bending course or with various turns.

warp

In rural economy, to cast the young prematurely.

warp

In agriculture, to inundate, as land, with sea water; or to let in the tide, forth purpose of fertilizing the ground by a deposit of warp or slimy substance. Warp here is the throw, or that which is cast by the water.

warp

In rope-making, to run the yarn off the winches into hauls to be tarred. To warp water, in Shakespeare, is forced and unusual; indeed it is not English.