Board Definition
- So as to affect or include all people, classes, or categories:
raised taxes across the board.
- Aboard.
- Ready to participate or be included; amenable:
The entire class was on board for the excursion to the park.
- to fall or be swept overboard
- to be gotten rid of, lost, ruined, etc.
- on, in, or into a ship
- on, in, or into an aircraft, bus, etc.
Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Board
Origin of Board
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From Middle English bord, Old English bord (“board”), from Proto-Germanic *burdą, from Proto-Indo-European *bʰrdʰ (“board”), from *bʰerdʰ (“to cut”).
From Wiktionary
Middle English bord from Old English
From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
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From backboard
From Wiktionary
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