To confess.
To take responsibility for.
To be very good.
To virtually or figuratively enslave.
To admit, concede, grant, allow, acknowledge, confess; not to deny.
To defeat or embarrass; to overwhelm.
To illicitly obtain superuser or root access to a computer system, thereby having access to all of the user files on that system; pwn.
To defeat, dominate, or be above, also spelled pwn.
To have recognized political sovereignty over a place, territory, as distinct from the ordinary connotation of property ownership.
To admit; concede; acknowledge.
To proudly acknowledge; to not be ashamed or embarrassed of.
To claim as one's own.
To have rightful possession of (property, goods or capital); to have legal title to; to acquire a property or asset.
To recognise; acknowledge.
Not shared.
Belonging to; possessed; acquired; proper to; property of; titled to; held in one's name; under/using the name of. Often marks a possessive determiner as reflexive, referring back to the subject of the clause or sentence.
To deny formally.
To use the motions of opposition or counteraction.
To travel across, often under difficult conditions.
To lay in a cross direction; to cross.
To (make a cutting, an incline) across the gradients of a sloped face at safe rate.
To plane in a direction across the grain of the wood.
To visit all parts of; to explore thoroughly.
To climb or descend a steep hill at a wide angle (relative to the slope).
To rotate a gun around a vertical axis to bear upon a military target.
To act against; to thwart or obstruct.
To pass over and view; to survey carefully.
Lying across; being in a direction across something else.
athwart; across; crosswise
In trench warfare, a defensive trench built to prevent enfilade.
A formal denial of some matter of fact alleged by the opposite party in any stage of the pleadings. The technical words introducing a traverse are absque hoc ("without this", i.e. without what follows).
Something that thwarts or obstructs.
The zigzag course or courses made by a ship in passing from one place to another; a compound course.
A gallery or loft of communication from side to side of a church or other large building.
A route used in mountaineering, specifically rock climbing, in which the descent occurs by a different route than the ascent.
A series of points, with angles and distances measured between, traveled around a subject, usually for use as "control" i.e. angular reference system for later surveying work.
A line lying across a figure or other lines; a transversal.
A traverse board.