flatten
See also: flåtten
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈflætən/
- Rhymes: -ætən
Verb
flatten (third-person singular simple present flattens, present participle flattening, simple past and past participle flattened)
- (transitive) To make something flat or flatter.
- As there was a lot of damage, we chose the heavy roller to flatten the pitch.
- Mary would flatten the dough before rolling it into pretzels.
- (reflexive) To press one's body tightly against a surface, such as a wall or floor, especially in order to avoid being seen or harmed.
- 1994, Stephen Fry, chapter 2, in The Hippopotamus:
- With a bolt of fright he remembered that there was no bathroom in the Hob-house Room. He leapt along the corridor in a panic, stopping by the long-case clock at the end where he flattened himself against the wall.
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- (transitive) To knock down or lay low.
- The prize fighter quickly flattened his challenger.
- (intransitive) To become flat or flatter; to plateau.
- Prices have flattened out.
- (intransitive) To be knocked down or laid low.
- (music) To lower by a semitone.
- To make vapid or insipid; to render stale.
- (programming, transitive) To reduce (a data structure) to one that has fewer dimensions, e.g. a 2×2 array into a list of four elements.
- (computer graphics, transitive) To combine (separate layers) into a single image.
Translations
to make something flat
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to knock down or lay low
to become flat
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