Full-line
[foo l-lahyn] /ˈfʊlˈlaɪn/
adjective, Commerce.
1.
of, supplying, or dealing in many related products and services, as opposed to a single or limited one.
Read Also:
- Full-marks
plural noun, British. 1. full credit; due praise.
- Full-linear-group
noun, Mathematics. 1. the group of all nonsingular linear transformations mapping a finite-dimensional vector space into itself.
- Fuel-oil
noun 1. an oil used for fuel, especially one used as a substitute for coal, as crude petroleum. noun 1. a liquid petroleum product having a flash point above 37.8°C: used as a substitute for coal in industrial furnaces, domestic heaters, ships, and locomotives
- Full-monty
[mon-tee] /ˈmɒn ti/ noun, Chiefly British Slang. 1. the, the whole thing; everything that is wanted or needed: At the press briefing, the reporters got the full monty. /ˈmɒntɪ/ noun 1. (informal) the full monty, something in its entirety noun A completely unclothed human body [1986+; in Montague Burton, a British firm of gentlemen’s outfitters, […]
- Full-moon day
noun phrase A day when many disturbed patrons visit (1990s+ Librarians)