To decorate (something).
To dress (someone) up, to clothe with more than ordinary elegance.
To knock someone to the floor, especially with a single punch.
To cause a player to run out of cards to draw, usually making them lose the game.
To furnish with a deck, as a vessel.
To cover; to overspread.
A folded paper used for distributing illicit drugs.
A set of slides for a presentation.
A set of cards owned by each individual player and from which they draw when playing.
The floorlike covering of the horizontal sections, or compartments, of a ship. Small vessels have only one deck; larger ships have two or three decks.
Any raised flat surface that can be walked on: a balcony; a porch; a raised patio; a flat rooftop.
A main aeroplane surface, especially of a biplane or multiplane.
A pack or set of playing cards.
A headline consisting of one or more actual lines of text.
The floor.
The stage.
To draw a graph.
To draw a graph of a function.
A topological space which represents some graph (ordered pair of sets) and which is constructed by representing the vertices as points and the edges as copies of the real interval [0,1] (where, for any given edge, 0 and 1 are identified with the points representing the two vertices) and equipping the result with a particular topology called the graph topology.
A set of vertices (or nodes) connected together by edges; (formally) an ordered pair of sets (V,E), where the elements of V are called vertices or nodes and E is a set of pairs (called edges) of elements of V. See also Graph (discrete mathematics) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
A graphical unit on the token-level, the abstracted fundamental shape of a character or letter as distinct from its ductus (realization in a particular typeface or handwriting on the instance-level) and as distinct by a grapheme on the type-level by not fundamentally distinguishing meaning.
A data chart (graphical representation of data) intended to illustrate the relationship between a set (or sets) of numbers (quantities, measurements or indicative numbers) and a reference set, whose elements are indexed to those of the former set(s) and may or may not be numbers.
A set of points constituting a graphical representation of a real function; (formally) a set of tuples (x_1,x_2,…,x_m,y)∈ R ᵐ⁺¹, where y=f(x_1,x_2,…,x_m) for a given function f: R ᵐ→ R . See also Graph of a function on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
A morphism 𝛤_f from the domain of f to the product of the domain and codomain of f, such that the first projection applied to 𝛤_f equals the identity of the domain, and the second projection applied to 𝛤_f is equal to f.