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English to English adjective
| 1 |
being or characteristic of a single thing or person |  | Example: individual drops of rain please mark the individual pages they went their individual ways
source: wordnet30
| 2 |
used of flowers having usually only one row or whorl of petals |  | Example: single chrysanthemums resemble daisies and may have more than one row of petals
source: wordnet30
| 3 |
existing alone or consisting of one entity or part or aspect or individual |  | Example: upon the hill stood a single tower had but a single thought which was to escape a single survivor a single serving a single lens a single thickness
source: wordnet30
| 4 |
not married or related to the unmarried state |  | Example: unmarried men and women unmarried life sex and the single girl single parenthood are you married or single?
source: wordnet30
| 5 |
One only, as distinguished from more than one; consisting of one alone; individual; separate; as, a single star. |  | source: webster1913 adjective satellite
| 6 |
characteristic of or meant for a single person or thing |  | Example: an individual serving single occupancy a single bed
source: wordnet30
| 7 |
having uniform application |  | Example: a single legal code for all
source: wordnet30
| 8 |
not divided among or brought to bear on more than one object or objective |  | Example: judging a contest with a single eye a single devotion to duty undivided affection gained their exclusive attention
source: wordnet30 noun
| 9 |
a base hit on which the batter stops safely at first base |  | source: wordnet30
| 10 |
the smallest whole number or a numeral representing this number |  | Example: he has the one but will need a two and three to go with it they had lunch at one
source: wordnet30
| 11 |
A unit; one; as, to score a single. |  | source: webster1913 verb
| 12 |
hit a single |  | Example: the batter singled to left field
source: wordnet30
| 13 |
To select, as an individual person or thing, from among a number; to choose out from others; to separate. |  | source: webster1913
| 14 |
To take the irrregular gait called single-foot;- said of a horse. See Single- foot. |  | source: webster1913
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