Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A mark on a surface differing sharply in color from its surroundings.
- noun A blemish, mark, or pimple on the skin.
- noun A stain or blot.
- noun A mark or pip on a playing card; a spade, club, diamond, or heart.
- noun A playing card with a specified number of such marks on it indicating its value.
- noun Informal A piece of paper money worth a specified number of dollars.
- noun A small area.
- noun A location or position.
- noun A point of interest.
- noun A position or an item in an ordered arrangement.
- noun Football The position of the ball for the line of scrimmage as determined by a referee after a play.
- noun Informal A situation, especially a troublesome one.
- noun A flaw in one's reputation or character.
- noun A short presentation or commercial on television or radio between major programs.
- noun Informal A spotlight.
- noun A small croaker (Leiostomus xanthurus) of North American Atlantic waters, having a dark mark above each pectoral fin and valued as a food and game fish.
- noun Chiefly British A small amount; a bit.
- intransitive verb To cause a spot or spots to appear on, especially.
- intransitive verb To soil with spots.
- intransitive verb To decorate with spots; dot.
- intransitive verb To bring disgrace to; besmirch.
- intransitive verb To place in a particular location; situate precisely.
- intransitive verb Football To position (the ball) determining the line of scrimmage after a play has been completed.
- intransitive verb To detect or discern, especially visually; spy.
- intransitive verb To remove spots from, as in a laundry.
- intransitive verb Sports To yield a favorable scoring margin to.
- intransitive verb Sports To act as a spotter for (a gymnast, for example).
- intransitive verb Informal To lend.
- intransitive verb To become marked with spots.
- intransitive verb To cause a discoloration or make a stain.
- intransitive verb To locate targets from the air during combat or training missions.
- adjective Made, paid, or delivered immediately.
- adjective Of, relating to, or being a market in which payment or delivery is immediate.
- adjective Involving random or selective instances or actions.
- adjective Presented between major radio or television programs.
- idiom (in spots) Now and then; here and there; occasionally.
- idiom (on the spot) Without delay; at once.
- idiom (on the spot) At the scene of action.
- idiom (on the spot) Under pressure or attention; in a pressed position.
from The Century Dictionary.
- In New Zealand, to buy up (choice spots of land containing water, etc.), ruining the neighboring property. Called
peacock in Australia. - See
blaze , 2, 3. - noun A stain made by foreign matter; a blot; a speck.
- noun A blemish; a flaw, a fault; especially, a stain upon moral purity.
- noun A bit of surface differing in some way from the rest, as in color, material, or finish; a dot; a small mark.
- noun A pustule or other eruptive mark, as in a rash.
- noun One of the pips on a playing-card; hence, in composition with a numeral, the card having pips to the number expressed: as, to play a ten-spot
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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This description implies the assemblage of strangers from all parts in one spot; -- _from all parts_; else, how will you find professors and students for every department of knowledge? and _in one spot_; else, how can there be any school at all?
Harvard Classics Volume 28 Essays English and American Various
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Or (if the elastic cord has already been fastened) we may remove the eye-tube and shift the telescope-tube about -- the direction in which the sun lies being roughly known -- until we see the spot of light received down the telescope's axis grow brighter and brighter and finally become a _spot of sun-light_.
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So in case you're wondering how all the other lovely ladies fared, here's a break-up of the runners-up to the title spot!
rediff.com 2010
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He further said that Chelsea will make a strong comeback to gain the title spot back.
Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7 2010
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He further said that Chelsea will make a strong comeback to gain the title spot back.
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More specifically. briandonnelly @MaileShoul Oh there is one in the house - took the title spot from Tori Spelling's novella. delicacy Tori Spelling @ 7th Anniversary Of Belle Gray Boutique
Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7 AP 2010
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I think the term spot reduction was created in order to try to market various fitness or fat loss products.
EveryJoe 2009
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Here, in a Toussaint arrangement that is the soul of the term spot-on, trumpeter Nicholas Payton shows just how deeply he understands this happy, jaunty number in a free, easy, yet deceptively commanding performance of the song's famous changes.
Stereophile RSS Feed 2009
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Kemmerer clinched his title spot on Saturday with a 1-0 decision over Western State College's Marques Bravo, using an escape in the second tiebreaker.
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Outside of the $1.60 an hour trying to find a spot is a PITA as well.
Street parking in downtown Portland hits $1.60 an hour (Jack Bog's Blog) 2009
milosrdenstvi commented on the word spot
A useful term for 'a bit of', as in, "I'll have a spot of orange juice, please?"
August 21, 2008