block
block
(blŏk) noun
Abbr. blk.
1.
a. A solid piece of a hard substance, such as wood, having one or more flat sides. b. Such a piece used as a construction member or as a support. c. Such a piece upon which chopping or cutting is done: a butcher's block. d. Such a piece upon which persons are beheaded. e. A small wooden or plastic cube used as a building toy: a set of blocks. f. Printing. A large amount of text. g. Sports. A starting block.
2. A stand from which articles are displayed and sold at an auction: Many priceless antiques went on the block.
3. A mold or form on which an item is shaped or displayed: a hat block.
4. A substance, such as wood or stone, that has been prepared for engraving.
5. a. A pulley or a system of pulleys set in a casing. b. An engine block.
6. A bloc.
7. A set of like items, such as shares of stock, sold or handled as a unit.
8. A group of four or more unseparated postage stamps forming a rectangle.
9. Canadian. A group of townships in an unsurveyed area.
10. a. A usually rectangular section of a city or town bounded on each side by consecutive streets. b. A segment of a street bounded by consecutive cross streets and including its buildings and inhabitants.
11. A large building divided into separate units, such as apartments.
12. A length of railroad track controlled by signals.
13. The act of obstructing.
14. Something that obstructs; an obstacle.
15. a. Sports. An act of bodily obstruction, as of a player or ball. b. Football. Legal interference with an opposing player to clear the path of the ball carrier.
16. Medicine. Interruption, especially obstruction, of a normal physiological function: nerve block.
17. Psychology. Sudden cessation of speech or a thought process without an immediate observable cause, sometimes considered a consequence of repression.
18. Slang. The human head: threatened to knock my block off.
19. A blockhead.
verb
blocked, blocking, blocks
verb
, transitive
1.
To shape into a block or blocks.
2.
To support, strengthen, or retain in place by means of a block.
3.
To shape, mold, or form with or on a block: block a hat.
4.
a. To stop or impede the passage of or movement through; obstruct: block traffic. b. To shut out from view: a curtain blocking the stage.
5. To indicate broadly without great detail; sketch: block out a plan of action.
6. Sports. To impede the movement of (an opponent or the ball) by physical interference.
7. Medicine. To interrupt the proper functioning of (a nervous, muscular, or other physiological process), especially by the use of anesthesia.
8. Psychology. To fail to remember.
9. To run (trains) on a block system.
verb
, intransitive
Sports. To obstruct the movement of an opponent.
idiom.
out of the blocks
From a starting position, as in a race or contest: The company has in the past been slow out of the blocks to adapt to consumer tastes.
[Middle English blok, from Old French, from Middle Dutch.]
block
ʹer noun
Synonyms:
block, hide, obscure, obstruct, screen, shroud. The central meaning shared by these verbs is "to cut off from sight": trees that block the view; a road hidden by brush; mist that obscures the mountain peak; skyscrapers obstructing the sky; a fence that screens the alley; a face shrouded by a heavy veil. See also synonyms at hinder1, obstacle.