Of a vessel: to roll so far on its side that it cannot recover; to capsize or turn turtle.
To collapse in a faint; to black out, to swoon.
To die.
To cause (something) to tilt to one side.
To enclose (a field, etc.) for combat.
To sew together, as strips of cloth, so as to make a show of colours, or to form a border.
To give a building of architectural or historical interest listed status; see also the adjective listed.
To create or recite a list.
To cut away a narrow strip, as of sapwood, from the edge of.
To plough and plant with a lister.
To cover with list, or with strips of cloth; to put list on; to stripe as if with list.
To place in listings.
To listen to.
To listen.
To prepare (land) for a cotton crop by making alternating beds and alleys with a hoe.
To tilt to one side.
Material used for cloth selvage.
A narrow strip of wood, especially sapwood, cut from the edge of a board or plank.
A careening or tilting to one side, usually not intentionally or under a vessel's own power.
A little square moulding; a fillet or listel.
The first thin coating of tin; a wire-like rim of tin left on an edge of the plate after it is coated.
A tilt to a building.
The barriers or palisades used to fence off a space for jousting or tilting tournaments.
The scene of a military contest; the ground or field of combat; an enclosed space that serves as a battlefield; the site of a pitched battle.
A register or roll of paper consisting of a compilation or enumeration of a set of possible items; the compilation or enumeration itself.
A piece of woollen cloth with which the yarns are grasped by a worker.
A strip of fabric, especially from the edge of a piece of cloth.
A codified representation of a list used to store data or in processing; especially, in the Lisp programming language, a data structure consisting of a sequence of zero or more items.