to tow

listen to the pronunciation of to tow
English - Turkish
English - English
Something, such as a tugboat, that tows
An untwisted bundle of fibers such as cellulose acetate, flax, hemp or jute
Something, such as a barge, that is towed
{v} to draw forward by means of a rope
{n} the coarse and broken parts of flax and hemp separated by a hatchel
taw
a rope or cable used in towing
An untwisted bundle of continuous filaments Commonly used in referring to man-made fibers, particularly carbon and graphite fibers, in the composites industry
Tube-launched, Optically Tracked, Wire-guided
Secondary linen fibers ranging in quality from excellent to part waste, and subject to quality variations
This will pay $50 towards each towing bill or for locking your keys in your car
If you have someone in tow, they are following you closely because you are looking after them or you are leading them somewhere. There she was on my doorstep with child in tow. Coarse broken flax or hemp fiber prepared for spinning. See Regional Note at gunnysack. to pull a vehicle or ship along behind another vehicle, using a rope or chain
Acronym for Tube-launched, Optical, Wire-guided, the standard U S crew-portable or vehicle mounted anti-tank weapon For its modern line, 21C has released a TOW Anti-Tank Weapon Set
the act of towing and the condition of being towed
An untwisted bundle of continuous filaments, usually designated by a number followed by "K," indicating multiplication by 1,000; for example, 12K tow has 12,000 filaments
A rope by which anything is towed; a towline, or towrope
That which is towed, or drawn by a towline, as a barge, raft, collection of boats, ect
When one or more vessels are being towed; when a tug is towing one or more floating objects; to pull an object in the water by means of a rope
The US BGM-71 series anti-tank missile (Tube-launched Optically-tracked Wire-guided)
Tube-launched Optically-controlled Wire-guided bomb
{i} act of towing, act of dragging or pulling with a rope or chain
the act of hauling something (as a vehicle) by means of a hitch or rope; "the truck gave him a tow to the garage" drag behind; "Horses used to tow barges along the canal
the act of hauling something (as a vehicle) by means of a hitch or rope; "the truck gave him a tow to the garage"
{f} pull, drag
tube-launched, optically-tracked, wire-guided antitank missile
Time of week, in seconds, from midnight Sunday UTC
An untwisted bundle of continuous filaments, usually designated by a number followed by K, indicating multiplication by 1,000 (for example, 12K tow has 12,000 filaments)
drag behind; "Horses used to tow barges along the canal
To draw or pull through the water, as a vessel of any kind, by means of a rope
The coarse and broken part of flax or hemp, separated from the finer part by the hatchel or swingle
Flax fiber used as upholstery stuffing
drag behind; "Horses used to tow barges along the canal"
to pull something behind one using a line or chain; to haul
Coarse fiber of flax, hemp or jute
To pull a boat with another boat, such as a tugboat towing a barge
If one vehicle tows another, it pulls it along behind it. He had been using the vehicle to tow his work trailer They threatened to tow away my car The British navy boarded the vessel and towed it to New York
the name given to an untwisted assembly of a large number of filaments; tows are cut up to produce staple fibres
The act of towing, or the state of being towed;chiefly used in the phrase, to take in tow, that is to tow
to tow
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