boundary

boundary
noun
1 EDGE (C) the official line that marks the edge of a town, country etc
(+ between): the boundary between the US and Canada | draw a boundary (=decide where one town etc ends and another one starts) | boundary line: the county's boundary line
2 WALL/FENCE (C) something such as a wall or fence that is intended to keep people or things separate: staying within the boundary of the old city walls
3 LIMIT (countable usually plural) the highest or most extreme limit that something can reach
(+ of): the boundaries of human knowledge
4 BETWEEN FEELINGS/QUALITIES ETC (C) the point at which one feeling, quality etc stops and another starts
(+ of/between): People disagree about the boundaries of political parties.
5 push back the boundaries (of) to change the way people think about an idea, belief etc, or greatly increase their knowledge of something: Her new essay really pushes back the boundaries of literary theory.
6 CRICKET (C) the outer limit of the playing area in cricket (2), or a shot that sends the balls across this limit for points

Longman dictionary of contemporary English. 2004.

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  • boundary — bound·ary n pl ar·ies: a theoretical line that marks the limit of an area of land Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. boundary I …   Law dictionary

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  • Boundary 2 — is an academic journal of postmodern cultural studies, critical theory, and literary criticism. In the 1970s and 1980s it was one of the primary venues for poststructuralist literary theory in the United States. It is edited primarily at the… …   Wikipedia

  • boundary — (n.) 1620s, from BOUND (Cf. bound) (n.) + ARY (Cf. ary) …   Etymology dictionary

  • boundary — [n] outer limit abuttals, ambit, barrier, beginning, border, borderland, borderline, bounds, brink, circumference, circumscription, compass, confines, edge, end, environs, extent, extremity, frame, fringe, frontier, hem, horizon, limits, line,… …   New thesaurus

  • boundary — ► NOUN (pl. boundaries) 1) a line marking the limits of an area. 2) Cricket a hit crossing the limits of the field, scoring four or six runs. ORIGIN from BOUND(Cf. ↑bound) …   English terms dictionary

  • boundary — [boun′drē, boun′də rē] n. pl. boundaries [ BOUND4 + ARY] any line or thing marking a limit; bound; border …   English World dictionary

  • boundary — noun 1 line that marks the limits of a place ADJECTIVE ▪ common ▪ northern, southern, etc. ▪ national, state ▪ territorial …   Collocations dictionary

  • boundary — bound|a|ry W3S2 [ˈbaundəri] n plural boundaries [Date: 1600 1700; Origin: BOUND41] 1.) the real or imaginary line that marks the edge of a state, country etc, or the edge of an area of land that belongs to someone boundary between ▪ The… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • boundary — 01. Anyone found skiing outside the [boundary] is putting himself in danger, and if caught, will lose his lift pass. 02. The post office marks the [boundary] between the two municipalities. 03. We made a [boundary] of trees at the back of our… …   Grammatical examples in English

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