flange
Plural: flanges
Noun
- a projection used for strength or for attaching to another object
- An external or internal rib or rim, used either to add strength or to hold something in place.
- The projecting edge of a rigid or semi-rigid component.
- An ability in a role-playing game which is not commonly available, overpowered or arbitrarily imposed by the referees.
- The vulva.
- A group of baboons.
- The electronic sound distortion produced by a flanger.
Verb
Verb Forms: flanged, flanging, flanges
- To provide or attach a flange, a projecting rim or edge.
- To be bent into a flange.
- To make a flange on; to furnish with a flange; to bend (esp. sheet metal) in the form of a flange.
- To mix two copies of together, one delayed by a very short, slowly varying time.
Examples
- She tried to FLANGE her word to connect with multiple bonus squares at once.
Origin / Etymology
From dialectal English flange (“to project”), flanch (“a projection”), from Middle French flanche, from Old French flanche (“flank, side”), from Frankish *hlanka, from Proto-Germanic *hlankō (“bend, curve; side, flank”). See flank. As a term for a group of baboons, it was popularized in the comedy TV series Not the Nine O'Clock News.
Scrabble Score: 10
flange: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordflange: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
flange: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary
Words With Friends Score: 13
flange: valid Words With Friends Word