File
File (fīl) , noun
[French file row (compare Pr., Sp., Portuguese, & Italian fila), Late Latin fila, from Latin filum a thread. Compare Enfilade, Filament, Fillet.]
The number of files in a company describes its width, as the number of ranks does its depth; thus, 100 men in “fours deep” would be spoken of as 25 files in 4 ranks. Farrow.
Collocations (6)
File , transitive verb
File , intransitive verb
[Compare French filer.]
Collocations (1)
File (fīl) , noun
[Anglo-Saxon feól; akin to Dutch viji, Old High German fīla, fīhala, German feile, Swedish fil, Danish fiil, compare Icelandic þēl, Russ. pila, and Sanskrit pic to cut out, adorn; perh. akin to English paint.]
A file differs from a rasp in having the furrows made by straight cuts of a chisel, either single or crossed, while the rasp has coarse, single teeth, raised by the pyramidal end of a triangular punch.
Collocations (7)
File , transitive verb
File , transitive verb
[Old English fulen, filen, foulen, Anglo-Saxon f{not transcribed}lan, from f{not transcribed}l foul. See Foul, and compare Defile, transitive verb]