Saturday, February 28, 2015

Till - definition of till by The Free Dictionary


Any definition so appropriate to trading the markets ;) from the beginning of preparation, through to collection of the monetary benefits to the process of the markets as they move like a powerful glacier. 

till1

 (tɪl) 

prep.
1. up to the time of; until: to fight till death.
2. before (used in negative constructions): They didn't come till today.
3. before; to: My watch says ten till four.
4. Chiefly Scot. to.
conj.
5. until.
[before 900; Middle English; Old English (north) til < Old Norse til to, akin to Old English till fixed point, Old High German zil goal, Gothic til opportunity. compare till2]
usage: till and until are both very old in the language and are interchangeable as both prepositions and conjunctions: It rained till (or untilnearly midnight. The savannah remained brown until (or tillthe rains began. till is not a shortened form of until and is not spelled 'till. 'tilis usu. considered a spelling error, though commonly used in business and advertising: Open 'til ten.

till2

 (tɪl) 

v.t.
1. to labor, as by plowing or harrowing, upon (land) for the raising of crops; cultivate.
v.i.
2. to cultivate the soil.
[before 900; Middle English tilen, Old English tilian to strive after, get, till; c. Old Frisian tilia to cultivate, Old Saxon tilian to attain, Old High German zilēn, zilōn to hasten; akin to till1]

till3

 (tɪl) 

n.
1. a drawer, box, or the like, in which money is kept, as in a shop.
2. a drawer, tray, or the like, as in a cabinet, chest, or desk, for keeping valuables.
[1425–75; late Middle English tylle < Anglo-French, of uncertain orig.]

till4

 (tɪl) 

n.
glacial drift consisting of an unsorted mixture of clay, sand, gravel, and boulders.
[1665–75; orig. uncertain]

till

 (tĭl)
A mass of boulders, pebbles, sand, and mud scraped up by a moving glacier and deposited either by the glacier's movement or by its melting.


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