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  1. Dictionary
    row
    /raʊ/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. have a quarrel: "they rowed about who would receive the money from the sale"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Learn the meaning of row as a noun or verb in English, with different senses and usage. Find out how to pronounce row and see examples from the Cambridge English Corpus.

    • English (US)

      ROW meaning: 1. a line of things, people, animals, etc....

    • Rower

      ROWER definition: 1. someone who rows a boat, especially as...

    • Shell

      SHELL definition: 1. the hard outer covering of something,...

    • Four

      FOUR definition: 1. the number 4: 2. a team of four people...

    • Rowan

      ROWAN definition: 1. a small tree with small, bright red...

    • Rowdyism

      ROWDYISM definition: 1. behaviour that is noisy and possibly...

    • Rowdily

      ROWDILY definition: 1. in a way that is noisy and possibly...

    • Rowdiness

      ROWDINESS definition: 1. behaviour that is noisy and...

  3. Learn the different meanings and uses of the word row, from propelling a boat with oars to having a quarrel. See synonyms, examples, etymology, and related phrases of row.

  4. Learn the meaning of row as a noun or verb in different contexts, such as a line, an argument, a boat movement, or a noise. See examples of row in sentences and collocations with other words.

  5. Row definition: a number of persons or things arranged in a line, especially a straight line. See examples of ROW used in a sentence.

  6. row arrangement or sequence. (roʊ ) Word forms: plural rows. 1. countable noun B1. A row of things or people is a number of them arranged in a line. ...a row of pretty little cottages. [ + of] Several men are pushing school desks and chairs into neat rows.

  7. n. 1. A series of objects placed next to each other, usually in a straight line. 2. A succession without a break or gap in time: won the title for three years in a row. 3. A line of adjacent seats, as in a theater, auditorium, or classroom. 4. A continuous line of buildings along a street. tr.v. rowed, row·ing, rows. To place in a row. Idiom:

  8. row. Other forms: rows; rowed; rowing. A row is a straight line of something, like a row of penguins at the zoo, tulips planted in a row in a garden, or a row of tuba players marching in the Fourth of July parade in your town.