webwork

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English

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Etymology

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From web +‎ work.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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webwork (usually uncountable, plural webworks)

  1. A net or web; something structured or interlinked in a weblike manner.
    • 1946, William Allison Shimer, editor, The American Scholar[1], volume XV, page 87:
      Most frequently, the three make up the webwork of his literary fabric.
    • 1990, Noël Carroll, The Philosophy of Horror: Or, Paradoxes of the Heart, New York: Routledge:
      Very quickly it becomes evident that these webworks are part of an unaccountably large lair of thousands of spiders.
    • 2002, Sten Odenwald, “Gravity’s Web”, in Patterns in the Void: Why Nothing Is Important[2], 1st edition, Westview Press, →ISBN, page 111:
      In some sense, the entire webwork of space-time would dissolve into myriad unconnected points in the spaceless and timeless Void with no communication between them.
    • 2003, David Carr, “Museums, Educative: An Encyclopedia Entry”, in The Promise of Cultural Institutions, Rowman Altamira, →ISBN, page 35:
      If museums are to assist their users to explore and develop what they know, they must invite the avalanche of questions and create the webwork of connections that configure a learning life.
    • 2003, Ben Jones, chapter XIII, in The Rope Eater, Doubleday, →ISBN, page 185:
      Delicate fingers of frost reached up from the floor and extended down from the ceiling; the bottles were covered with a lacy webwork so fine that it looked like cobwebs.

Synonyms

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