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Loop   /lup/   Listen
Loop

noun
1.
Fastener consisting of a metal ring for lining a small hole to permit the attachment of cords or lines.  Synonyms: cringle, eyelet, grommet, grummet.
2.
Anything with a round or oval shape (formed by a curve that is closed and does not intersect itself).
3.
(computer science) a single execution of a set of instructions that are to be repeated.  Synonym: iteration.
4.
An inner circle of advisors (especially under President Reagan).
5.
The basic pattern of the human fingerprint.
6.
A computer program that performs a series of instructions repeatedly until some specified condition is satisfied.
7.
The topology of a network whose components are serially connected in such a way that the last component is connected to the first component.  Synonym: loop topology.
8.
An intrauterine device in the shape of a loop.
9.
A complete electrical circuit around which current flows or a signal circulates.  Synonym: closed circuit.  Antonym: open circuit.
10.
A flight maneuver; aircraft flies a complete circle in the vertical plane.  Synonym: loop-the-loop.
verb
(past & past part. looped; pres. part. looping)
1.
Move in loops.
2.
Make a loop in.  Synonym: intertwine.
3.
Fly loops, perform a loop.
4.
Wind around something in coils or loops.  Synonyms: coil, curl.  Antonym: uncoil.
5.
Fasten or join with a loop.



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"Loop" Quotes from Famous Books



... have seen, to assist independent undertakings in Montgomeryshire, were ready enough to capture traffic in other quarters, and their answer to the Oswestry and Whitchurch project was to formulate a scheme for a branch from Rednal to Ellesmere, with incidental hints about constructing a loop to place Oswestry on their main line. Draughtsmen were busy everywhere with pens and plans. Public halls echoed to the optimistic eloquence of promoters and counter promoters, and powder and shot was being hurriedly got together for the tremendous fusilade in the Parliamentary committee rooms, where, ...
— The Story of the Cambrian - A Biography of a Railway • C. P. Gasquoine

... dislike Of our proceedings, kept the earl from hence: And think how such an apprehension May turn the tide of fearful faction, And breed a kind of question in our cause; For well you know we of the offering side Must keep aloof from strict arbitrement, And stop all sight-holes, every loop from whence The eye of reason may pry in upon us. This absence of your father's draws a curtain, That shows the ignorant a kind of ...
— King Henry IV, The First Part • William Shakespeare [Hudson edition]

... Jeffries, and Dunne: well mounted upon horses, and armed with muskets, they scoured the colony: murder, pillage, and arson, rendered every homestead the scene of terror and dismay. Those settlers most exposed, often abandoned the business of their farms: their dwellings were perforated with loop-holes, their men were posted as sentinels, and all the precautions adopted, necessary in a state of war. But though not without supporters and accomplices, the bushrangers were in far greater danger of betrayal and capture than at a former ...
— The History of Tasmania , Volume II (of 2) • John West

... needed for the drawing of one of those ellipses which Kepler has shown to possess such astonishing astronomical significance. Two pins are stuck through a sheet of paper on a board, the point of a pencil is inserted in a loop of string which passes over the pins, and as the pencil is moved round in such a way as to keep the string stretched, that beautiful curve known as the ellipse is delineated, while the positions of the pins ...
— Great Astronomers • R. S. Ball

... still of interest: "The Otsego bass can be taken with small minnows or red angle worms. I think if your tackle is very fine, and you do not twitch when they bite, they will swallow the bait. Put five or ten hooks (O'Shaunessy 8's, forged) on a fine snell, and loop them five feet apart; with a small sinker at the end. Bait some with small minnows (an inch or so in length) and some with worms. Cast out as far as you can from the boat, and let it lie half or three quarters of an hour on the bottom, feeling ...
— The Story of Cooperstown • Ralph Birdsall


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