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Keywords:
Pencil,
Threadlike,
Mark,
Elongated,
Longitudinal
A more or less threadlike mark of pen, pencil, or graver; any long mark; as, a chalk line.
A threadlike crease marking the face or the hand; hence, characteristic mark.
A long tape, or a narrow ribbon of steel, etc., marked with subdivisions, as feet and inches, for measuring; a tapeline.
One of the straight horizontal and parallel prolonged strokes on and between which the notes are placed.
To mark with a line or lines; to cover with lines; as, to line a copy book.
a narrow raised ridge.
an actual or implied mark, path, mass, or edge, where length is dominant.
fine longitudinal marking
A mark with length and direction. Line can be the outline of a shape, or it can create patterns and movement.
An uninterrupted actual mark or implied direction going from one point to another.
element of design that is distinct, elongated mark as if drawn by a pencil or pen. Also, a collection of styles and designs that will be produced and sold as a firm¹s new selections for a given season.
A technical term used to describe price movements within a market that stay within a narrow range (usually within 5%) over a given time period.
Narrow, elongated mark that usually extends discontinuously or continuously for one to a few segments; a very narrow longitudinal mark that touches or runs near a wider longitudinal stripe.
An element of art that is a continuous mark made with a tool as it is drawn across a surface.
element of art which refers to the mark(s) made on a surface by a moving point. The element of line has a wide range of qualities and expressive possibilities: curved lines, diagonal lines, dotted lines, straight lines, etc.
A mark made by an instrument as it is drawn across a surface.
The continuous mark, visual or implied, made by a moving point. It may be two-dimensional (pencil on paper), three dimensional (wire), or implied (the edge of a shape or form). Line may vary in length, direction, texture, width, curvature, and color.
The marks that serve as boundaries of a court.
an element of art that is a continuous mark made on a surface by a moving point. Types of line include: vertical, horizontal, straight, curved, bent, angular, thin, thick or wide, or interrupted (dotted, dashed, broken, etc). Lines define spaces, shapes, outlines, or patterns.
a mark which has length but (theoretically) not height; a narrow elongated mark (see ATA, p. 11; fig. 1-5) intel. the horizontal architectural member creating the upper boundary of an entryway (ATA fig. 12-24) [image
Continuous straight or curved mark made on a surface. Lines evoke emotional and psychological responses depending on their direction and quality. A horizontal line generally creates a restful and stable impression. Curving lines gradually changing from thick to thin can be pleasurable and comforting.
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