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Synonyms
wall (wôl)

[Middle English, from Old English weall, from Latin vallum, palisade, from vallus, stake.]

noun 

  1. An upright structure of masonry, wood, plaster, or other building material serving to enclose, divide, or protect an area, especially a vertical construction forming an inner partition or exterior siding of a building.
  2. A continuous structure of masonry or other material forming a rampart and built for defensive purposes. Often used in the plural.
  3. A structure of stonework, cement, or other material built to retain a flow of water.
    1. Something resembling a wall in appearance, function, or construction, as the exterior surface of a body organ or part: the abdominal wall.
    2. Something resembling a wall in impenetrability or strength: a wall of silence; a wall of fog.
    3. An extreme or desperate condition or position, such as defeat or ruin: driven to the wall by poverty.
  4. Sports The vertical surface of an ocean wave in surfing.

transitive verb: walled, wall·ing, walls. 

  1. To enclose, surround, or fortify with or as if with a wall: wall up an old window. See synonyms at enclose
  2. To divide or separate with or as if with a wall. Often used with off: wall off half a room.
  3. To confine or seal behind a wall; immure: “I determined to wall up in the cellar” (Edgar Allan Poe)
  4. To block or close (an opening or passage, for example) with or as if with a wall.

idioms

off the wall
Extremely unconventional. Without foundation; ridiculous: an accusation that is really off the wall.
up the wall
Into a state of extreme frustration, anger, or distress: tensions that are driving me up the wall.
writing on the wall
An ominous indication of the course of future events: saw the writing on the wall and fled the country.

derivatives

walĺless
adjective