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Webster 1913 Edition


Lineament

Lin′e-a-ment

(lĭn′ē̍-ȧ-ment)
,
Noun.
[L.
lineamentum
, fr.
linea
line: cf. F.
linéament
. See 3d
Line
.]
One of the outlines, exterior features, or distinctive marks, of a body or figure, particularly of the face; feature; form; mark; – usually in the plural.
“The lineaments of the body.”
Locke.
Lineaments in the character.”
Swift.
Man he seems
In all his
lineaments
.
Milton.

Webster 1828 Edition


Lineament

LIN'EAMENT

,
Noun.
[L. lineamentum.]
Feature; form; make; the outline or exterior of a body or figure, particularly of the face.
Man he seems in all his lineaments.
- The lineaments of the body.
- Lineaments of a character.

Definition 2024


lineament

lineament

See also: linéament

English

Noun

lineament (plural lineaments)

  1. Any distinctive shape or line, etc.
    • 1967, United States Geological Survey, Geological Survey Research 1967: Chapter A [Geological Survey Professional Paper; 575-A], Washington, D.C.: United States Government Publishing Office, OCLC 5975816, page A145:
      East-trending lineaments, some as long as 400 miles, are clearly discernible on the aeromagnetic maps. These lineaments may be associated with large fractures in the earth's crust.
    • 1988, A[rnold] I[van] Johnson & C. B[ernt] Pettersson, editor, Geotechnical Applications of Remote Sensing and Remote Data Transmission: A Symposium Sponsored by ASTM Committee D-18 on Soil and Rock, Cocoa Beach, FL, 31 Jan. – 1 Feb. 1986 [Special Technical Publication; 967], Philadelphia, Pa.: American Society for Testing and Materials, ISBN 978-0-8031-0969-8, page 22:
      The presence of lineaments is significant in site evaluation for waste disposal, because some lineaments may be faults or fracture zones with the potential to be ground-water conductors.
  2. A distinctive feature that characterizes something, especially the parts of the face of an individual.
    • 1609, Thomas Dekker, The Guls Horn-Booke, London: J.M. Dent, 1905, p. 23,
      [] onely remember, that so soone as thy eyelids be unglewd, thy first exercise must be (either sitting upright on thy pillow, or rarely loling at thy bodies whole length) to yawne, to stretch, and to gape wider then any oyster-wife : for thereby thou doest not onely send out the lively spirits (like vaunt-curers) to fortifie and make good the uttermost borders of the body ; but also (as a cunning painter) thy goodly lineaments are drawne out in their fairest proportion.
    • 1791, William Blake, The French Revolution, Book I, 31-32,
      [] a mask of iron on his face hid the lineaments
      Of ancient Kings, and the frown of the eternal lion was hid from the oppressed earth.
    • 1923, James Stephens, Deirdre, London: Macmillan, Chapter VIII, p. 55,
      But she could not wipe out the king's majesty with that sponge nor alter one lineament of the portrait she had taken ten years to limn.
    • 1927, John Crowe Ransom, Dead Boy:
      A pig with a pasty face, so I had said,
      Squealing for cookies, kinned by poor pretense
      With a noble house. But the little man quite dead,
      I see the forbears' antique lineaments.

(Can we add an example for this sense?)

Translations

References

  • lineament in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913

Anagrams