keystone

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See also: Keystone

English

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The keystone of an arch (sense 1).

Etymology

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From key +‎ stone.

Definition 4 (retail) possibly originated in the jewelry industry in the magazine called "Jewelers' Circular-Keystone".[1]

Pronunciation

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  • Audio (US):(file)
  • IPA(key): /ˈkiː.stəʊn/
  • Rhymes: -iːstəʊn

Noun

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keystone (plural keystones)

  1. (architecture) The top stone of an arch.
    • 1950 March, “Notes and News: Sugar Loaf Tunnel, Central Wales Line”, in Railway Magazine, page 209:
      The tunnel, which is 1,000 yd. long, had been closed to passenger traffic since November 17, 1949, after some of the keystones had worked loose.
  2. Something on which other things depend for support.
    • 1999, Eliezer Geisler, Methodology, Theory, and Knowledge in the Managerial and Organizational ...[1]:
      Tension between empirical and theoretical knowledge is keystone to sociological and to organizational theories, as early as in Marx's and Weber's frameworks.
  3. A native or resident of the American state of Pennsylvania.
  4. (retail) A retail price that is double the cost price; a markup of 100%.
  5. (baseball) The combination of the shortstop and second baseman.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Verb

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keystone (third-person singular simple present keystones, present participle keystoning, simple past and past participle keystoned)

  1. (transitive) To distort (an image) by projecting it onto a surface at an angle, which for example causes a square to look like a trapezoid.
  2. (transitive, retail) To double the cost price in order to determine the retail price; to apply a markup of 100%.

References

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Anagrams

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