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ramp

-1 n. சாய்ப்பிடை, கோட்டை அரணில் இரண்டு தள மட்டங்களை இணைக்குஞ் சாய்தளம், மதிலர் முகட்டுச் சாய் விளிம்பு, கொடுவில் வளைவில் இருதிசைச் செவ்வுயரப்பகுதி வேறுபாடு, எழுவளைவு, படிக்கட்ட அழிக்கம்பியின் உள்வளைந்து மேல்நோக்கிய சாய்வளைவு, (வினை) சிங்கத்தின் வகையில் மு-2 n. புத்தகத் தொகுப்பாளரிடம் கற்பனைக்கடன் சாக்கிட்டுப் பறிக்கப்படும் வல்லடி வழக்குப்பணம், கொள்ளைப்பணம், மிகுவிலைக் கொள்ளை, மோசடி, (வினை) கற்பனைக் கல்னைச் செலுத்துமாறு கெடுபிடிசெய், மோசடிசெய்.


Ramp, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Ramped; p. pr. & vb. n. Ramping.] Etym: [F. ramper to creep, OF., to climb; of German origin; cf. G. raffen to snatch, LG. & D. rapen. See Rap to snatch, and cf. Romp.] 1. To spring; to leap; to bound; to rear; to prance; to become rampant; hence, to frolic; to romp. 2. To move by leaps, or by leaps; hence, to move swiftly or with violence. Their bridles they would champ, And trampling the fine element would fiercely ramp. Spenser. 3. To climb, as a plant; to creep up. With claspers and tendrils, they [plants] catch hold, . . . and so ramping upon trees, they mount up to a great height. Ray. Ramp, n. 1. A leap; a spring; a hostile advance. The bold Ascalonite Fled from his lion ramp. Milton. 2. A highwayman; a robber. [Prov. Eng.] 3. A romping woman; a prostitute. [Obs.] Lyly. 4. Etym: [F. rampe.] (Arch.) (a) Any sloping member, other than a purely constructional one, such as a continuous parapet to a staircase. (b) A short bend, slope, or curve, where a hand rail or cap changes its direction. 5. Etym: [F. rampe.] (Fort.) Defn: An inclined plane serving as a communication between different interior levels. Ramp, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Ramped; p. pr. & vb. n. Ramping.] Etym: [F. ramper to creep, OF., to climb; of German origin; cf. G. raffen to snatch, LG. & D. rapen. See Rap to snatch, and cf. Romp.] 1. To spring; to leap; to bound; to rear; to prance; to become rampant; hence, to frolic; to romp. 2. To move by leaps, or by leaps; hence, to move swiftly or with violence. Their bridles they would champ, And trampling the fine element would fiercely ramp. Spenser. 3. To climb, as a plant; to creep up. With claspers and tendrils, they [plants] catch hold, . . . and so ramping upon trees, they mount up to a great height. Ray. Ramp, n. 1. A leap; a spring; a hostile advance. The bold Ascalonite Fled from his lion ramp. Milton. 2. A highwayman; a robber. [Prov. Eng.] 3. A romping woman; a prostitute. [Obs.] Lyly. 4. Etym: [F. rampe.] (Arch.) (a) Any sloping member, other than a purely constructional one, such as a continuous parapet to a staircase. (b) A short bend, slope, or curve, where a hand rail or cap changes its direction. 5. Etym: [F. rampe.] (Fort.) Defn: An inclined plane serving as a communication between different interior levels.


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