Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Third-person singular simple present indicative form of
mainline .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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One mainlines heroin and the other spends taxpayer money.
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Cable news starts with a story, removes the grain and nuance then mainlines the fury.
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Unlike soda or cinnamon rolls or any of the other sweets that kids confront at lunchtime, flavored milk actually mainlines some of the things kids really do need to grow.
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One mainlines heroin and the other spends taxpayer money.
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Unlike soda or cinnamon rolls or any of the other sweets that kids confront at lunchtime, flavored milk actually mainlines some of the things kids really do need to grow.
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Cable news starts with a story, removes the grain and nuance then mainlines the fury.
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Unlike soda or cinnamon rolls or any of the other sweets that kids confront at lunchtime, flavored milk actually mainlines some of the things kids really do need to grow.
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There used to be a railway line, linking with mainlines at Yatton in the north and Witham in the south, to transport produce – notably Cheddar strawberries – from these fields to market, but it closed in 1965, and along its route there is now an eight-mile traffic-free way for cyclists and walkers called the Strawberry Line.
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Unlike soda or cinnamon rolls or any of the other sweets that kids confront at lunchtime, flavored milk actually mainlines some of the things kids really do need to grow.
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That strange, strangulated smile, the ever encroaching brow — this is not the demeanour of a man who, for example, mainlines camel tranquillisers every morning.
Is it more rude to ask if someone’s going whacko than blind? 2009
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