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

  2. noun. uk / rəʊ / us. row noun (LINE) Add to word list. B1. a straight line of people or things: a row of chairs / houses. My students sit at desks in rows for most of the time. Fewer examples. The street is made up of a row of houses of uniform height. The area was separated by a row of traffic cones.

  3. 2 days ago · 1. countable noun. 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. Synonyms: line, bank, range, series More Synonyms of row. 2. countable noun.

  4. 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:

  5. noun. /roʊ/ row (of somebody/something) a number of people standing or sitting next to each other in a line; a number of objects arranged in a line a row of trees We sat in a row at the back of the room. The vegetables were planted in neat rows. Join us.

  6. to quarrel or argue noisily. WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024. row1 (rō), n. a number of persons or things arranged in a line, esp. a straight line: a row of apple trees. a line of persons or things so arranged: The petitioners waited in a row.

  7. Row Definition. rō. rowed, rowing, rows. Meanings. Synonyms. Sentences. Definition Source. Word Forms. Origin. Noun. Verb. Idiom. Filter. noun. rows. A number of people or things arranged so as to form a line, esp. a straight line. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. A succession without a break or gap in time.

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