Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | English word LINER


LINER

Definitions of LINER

  1. Someone who fits a lining to something.
  2. A removable cover or lining
  3. The pamphlet which is contained inside an album of music or movie
  4. A lining within the cylinder of a steam engine, in which the piston works and between which and the outer shell of the cylinder a space is left to form a steam jacket.
  5. A slab on which small pieces of marble, tile, etc., are fastened for grinding.
  6. A large passenger-carrying ship, especially one on a regular route; an ocean liner.
  7. A formal no show sock.
  8. A pantyliner.
  9. (nautical) A ship of the line.
  10. (baseball) A line drive.
  11. (marketing, slang) A basic salesperson.
  12. (in combination) Something with a specified number of lines.
  13. (South Korean idol fandom) person born in a certain year (); person who belongs to a certain line
  14. Short for penny-a-liner.
  15. (initialism) low ionization nuclear emission line region
  16. A surname.

2

Number of letters

5

Is palindrome

No

7
ER
IN
LI
LIN
NE
NER

4

83

211

87
EI
EIL
EIN
EIR
EL
ELI
ELN
EN
ENL
ENR
ER
ERN
IE
IL

Examples of Using LINER in a Sentence

  • Louis, a German ocean liner, notable for a voyage in 1939 when it carried 908 Jewish refugees from Germany.
  • Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse ("Emperor William the Great") was a German transatlantic ocean liner in service from 1897 to 1914, when she was scuttled in battle.
  • The Spanish liner Santa Isabel breaks in two and sinks off Villa Garcia, Mexico, with the loss of 244 of the 300 people on board.
  • A typical modern shaped charge, with a metal liner on the charge cavity, can penetrate armor steel to a depth of seven or more times the diameter of the charge (charge diameters, CD), though depths of 10 CD and above have been achieved.
  • SS General von Steuben was a German passenger liner and later an armed transport ship of the German Navy that was sunk in the Baltic Sea during World War II.
  • Originally built for the Cunard Line, the ship was operated by Cunard as both a transatlantic liner and a cruise ship from 1969 to 2008.
  • The story involves a submarine commander who refuses to fire at a civilian ocean liner supposedly carrying ammunition for his country's enemies.
  • The film is based on a story by Monckton Hoffe about a mismatched couple who meet on board an ocean liner.
  • Corrugated (also called pleated) paper was patented in England in 1856, and used as a liner for tall hats, but corrugated boxboard was not patented and used as a shipping material until 20 December 1871.
  • She returned to civilian service after the war, and served successfully as an ocean liner throughout the 1920s and into the first half of the 1930s, although increased competition, and the slump in trade during the Great Depression after 1930, made her operation increasingly unprofitable.
  • For each Swirling Eddies release, band members adopted pseudonyms for the liner notes; "Camarillo Eddy" (Terry Scott Taylor), "Berger Roy Al" (Tim Chandler), "Gene Pool" (Greg Flesch), "Arthur Fhardy" (Rob Watson), "Spot" (Jerry Chamberlain), and "Hort Elvison" (David Raven).
  • During World War I, in the rank of Captain, he commanded the troop transport , formerly the German liner SS Amerika, and was awarded the Navy Cross for this service.
  • Another was the transatlantic ocean liner RMS Virginian, which Swedish American Line bought in 1920 and renamed.
  • In this episode, a passenger aboard a British cargo liner has no memory of how he came aboard, and is tormented by unexpected clues to his true identity and a sense that the ship is headed toward impending doom.
  • This "funkology" was outlined in album liner notes and song lyrics, in addition to album artwork, costumes, advertisements, and stage banter.
  • Cosmic Slop is the first Funkadelic album to feature artwork and liner notes by Pedro Bell, who assumed responsibility for the band's gate-fold album covers and liner notes until the band's collapse after 1981's The Electric Spanking of War Babies.
  • Evans lost her life after the ocean liner sank into the Atlantic Ocean, but her efforts saved Caroline Brown from Acton, Massachusetts.
  • MS Stockholm (1941), an ocean liner of the same design as above, completed for the Swedish American Line but sold to the Italian government, becoming a troopship.
  • In the liner notes, the album is dedicated to AC/DC lead singer Bon Scott, who died in February 1980.
  • The decision to include these cover tracks on the CD, along with some long, wandering liner notes, bewildered DA fans.
  • The liner notes included references to dissociative anesthesia through ketamine as well as Timothy Leary, "futants", ritual magic, and religious fundamentalism.
  • In 2002, Rhino Records remastered the album, filled out the disc's length with demos and added another disc of live tracks and a radio interview for a 20th anniversary special edition, with liner notes by Michael Azerrad.
  • The album's liner notes described the song as being against punks who came into the scene, ruined it for other fans, then left, and not being against the practice of squatting.
  • During the war Italian troopships also left from La Spezia, including the Kaiser Franz Josef, a trans-Atlantic liner launched in Trieste in 1911 for the Austrian Lloyd company, which Italy had confiscated in 1919.
  • RMS Queen Mary is a retired British ocean liner that operated primarily on the North Atlantic Ocean from 1936 to 1967 for the Cunard Line.



Search for LINER in:






Page preparation took: 200.06 ms.