wedge
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 10
- Words With Friends
- 11
- Letters
- 5
Definition of wedge
31 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included
noun
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(countable, uncountable)One of the simple machines; a piece of material, such as metal or wood, thick at one edge and tapered to a thin edge at the other for insertion in a narrow crevice, used for splitting, tightening, securing, or levering.
“Stick a wedge under the door, will you? It keeps blowing shut.”
See all 31 definitions Show less
noun
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(countable, uncountable)One of the simple machines; a piece of material, such as metal or wood, thick at one edge and tapered to a thin edge at the other for insertion in a narrow crevice, used for splitting, tightening, securing, or levering.
“Stick a wedge under the door, will you? It keeps blowing shut.”
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(countable, uncountable)A piece (of food, metal, wood etc.) having this shape.
“Can you cut me a wedge of cheese?”
“We ordered a box of baked potato wedges with our pizza, and an iceberg wedge as our side salad.”
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(countable, figuratively, uncountable)Something that creates a division, gap or distance between things.
“Near-synonyms: wedge issue, salami tactics, culture wars”
“drive a wedge between [persons, peoples, camps, allies, etc.]”
“It is one of the ironies of capital cities that each acts as a symbol of its nation, and yet few are even remotely representative of it. London has always set itself apart from the rest of Britain — but political, economic and social trends are conspiring to drive that wedge deeper.”
- (countable, uncountable)A five-sided polyhedron with a rectangular base, two rectangular or trapezoidal sides meeting in an edge, and two triangular ends.
- (countable, uncountable)A voussoir, one of the wedge-shaped blocks forming an arch or vault.
- (archaic, countable, uncountable)A flank of cavalry acting to split some portion of an opposing army, charging in an inverted V formation.
- (collective, countable, uncountable)A group of geese, swans, or other birds when they are in flight in a V formation.
- (countable, uncountable)A type of iron club used for short, high trajectories.
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(countable, uncountable)One of a pair of wedge-heeled shoes.
“She was wearing wedges, and I have a horrible suspicion they were her mum's wedges left over from the last century.”
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(countable, obsolete, uncountable)An ingot.
“Open the Males, yet guard the treaſure ſure. Lay out our golden wedges to the view, That their reflexions may amaze the Perſeans.”
- (broadly, obsolete, slang, uncountable)Silver or items made of silver collectively.
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(British, broadly, colloquial, countable, uncountable)A quantity of money.
“He's got some decent wedge.”
“I made a big fat wedge from that job.”
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(New-York, US, countable, regional, uncountable)A sandwich made on a long, cylindrical roll.
“I ordered a chicken parm wedge from the deli.”
“She hoped it wasn't a meatball wedge, because there's so much garlic in school meatballs that it might make my breath smell and knock the agent out of his chair.”
“Most people realize there are a lot of different names for that type of sandwich, so Scalone wondered what was so funny about wedge?”
- (countable, uncountable)One of the basic elements that make up cuneiform writing, a single triangular impression made with the corner of a reed stylus.
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(US, countable, uncountable)Any symbol shaped like a V in some given orientation.
“The wedge is used in Czech and is illustrated by the Czech name for the diacritic, haček.”
“The tilde and the circumflex have a place in the ASCII scheme but the wedge and the umlaut do not.”
“The háček or ‘wedge’ ⟨ˇ⟩ is a diacritic commonly used in Slavic orthographies. […] As a tone mark the wedge is used iconically for a falling-rising tone as in Chinese Pinyin.”
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(countable, uncountable)Any symbol shaped like a V in some given orientation.
“Turned V is referred to as “Wedge” by some phoneticians, but this seems inadvisable to us, because the haček accent (ˇ) is also called that in names like Wedge C for (č).”
- (countable, uncountable)Any symbol shaped like a V in some given orientation.
- (countable, uncountable)Any symbol shaped like a V in some given orientation.
- (countable, uncountable)A barometric ridge; an elongated region of high atmospheric pressure between two low-pressure areas.
- (countable, uncountable)A wedge tornado.
- (countable, uncountable)A market trend characterized by a contracting range in prices coupled with an upward trend in prices (a rising wedge) or a downward trend in prices (a falling wedge).
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(UK)The person whose name stands lowest on the list of the classical tripos.
“The last man is called the Wedge, corresponding to the Spoon in Mathematics.”
verb
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(transitive)To support or secure using a wedge.
“I wedged open the window with a screwdriver.”
“"Did he take his bottle well?" Mrs. Flanders whispered, and Rebecca nodded and went to the cot and turned down the quilt, and Mrs. Flanders bent over and looked anxiously at the baby, asleep, but frowning. The window shook, and Rebecca stole like a cat and wedged it.”
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(ambitransitive)To force into a narrow gap.
“He had wedged the package between the wall and the back of the sofa.”
“I wedged into the alcove and listened carefully.”
“During [Tucker] Carlson’s keynote, he wedged sneers at his critics for crying “racist!” in between racist remarks about [Ilhan] Omar, jeremiads against the media (“I know there’s a bunch of reporters here, so . . . screw you”), and an attack on Elizabeth Warren and her donors (“She’s a tragedy, because she’s now obsessed with racism, which is why the finance world supports her”)—all to gleeful applause.”
- (transitive)To pack (people or animals) together tightly into a mass.
- (transitive)To work wet clay by cutting or kneading for the purpose of homogenizing the mass and expelling air bubbles.
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(informal, intransitive)Of a computer program or system: to get stuck in an unresponsive state.
“My Linux kernel wedged after I installed the latest update.”
- (transitive)To cleave with a wedge.
- (transitive)To force or drive with a wedge.
- (transitive)To shape into a wedge.
name
- A surname.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English wegge (“wedge”), from Old English weċġ (“wedge”), from Proto-West Germanic *wagi, from Proto-Germanic *wagjaz.
Words you can make from wedge
15 playable · top: WEED (8 pts)
Best play weed 8 points4-letter words
2 words3-letter words
8 words2-letter words
4 wordsHooks
2 extensions · 2 back
A single letter you can add to wedge to make another valid word.
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