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Deck   /dɛk/   Listen
Deck

noun
1.
Any of various platforms built into a vessel.
2.
Street name for a packet of illegal drugs.
3.
A pack of 52 playing cards.  Synonyms: deck of cards, pack of cards.
4.
A porch that resembles the deck on a ship.
verb
(past & past part. decked; pres. part. decking)
1.
Be beautiful to look at.  Synonyms: adorn, beautify, decorate, embellish, grace.
2.
Decorate.  Synonyms: bedeck, bedight.
3.
Knock down with force.  Synonyms: coldcock, dump, floor, knock down.



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"Deck" Quotes from Famous Books



... from looking backward to the good old days when Romance wore a tin helmet on his head or lace in his sleeves—in such an age Simon Binswanger first beheld the high-flung torch of Goddess Liberty from the fore of the steerage deck of a wooden ship, his small body huddled in the sag of calico skirt between his mother's knees, and the sky-line and clothes-lines of the lower East Side dawning ...
— Every Soul Hath Its Song • Fannie Hurst

... Katie. As she sat there still seeming to listen, suddenly, it seemed to her, for she could not trace its coming, a picture rose before her with the vividness of reality. She saw Archdale and Edmonson standing together on the deck of the same vessel bound upon the same errand, always together; and she remembered Edmonson' muttered words, and his face dark with passion over all ...
— The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 4 • Various

... actually printed. Immense rolls of paper are being lowered from the street level and handled as easily as if they were of no more weight than a lead pencil, put before machines which devour them to a deafening noise of machinery. The room reminds one of the lower deck of an ironclad in action, and the workers there seem fighting for their lives—fighting against time, fighting against the machine, fighting against the paper, which would fill up the room if it were left at the discharging end of the machines ...
— Impressions of a War Correspondent • George Lynch

... suggestive of fear, yellow mud, and kindred abominations. Perhaps we were not things of beauty either, seen through the dim perspective of rain and mud. No doubt our faces had the appearance of sailors huddled up on quarter-deck benches, silent and fearful of seasickness. At last, after many vicissitudes and narrow escapes, we reached a fine macadam road and breathed more easily and enjoyed ...
— See America First • Orville O. Hiestand

... wrecked on Treasure Island and that everyone was drowned except Nancy, Oliver, and perhaps the trombone player of the ships' band, who had blown himself so full of wind for fox-trots on the upper deck that he couldn't sink. It is Robinson Crusoe, lodging as a handsome bachelor on the lonely island—observe the cunning of the plot!—who battles with the waves and rescues Nancy. The movie-rights alone of this are worth a fortune. And then Crusoe, ...
— Confessions of a Book-Lover • Maurice Francis Egan


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