ply
ply1 / plī/ • n. (pl. plies) 1. a thickness or layer of a folded or laminated material. ∎ [usu. in comb.] a strand of yarn or rope: [as adj.] four-ply yarn. ∎ the number of layers or strands of which something is made: the yarn can be any ply from two to eight. ∎ [usu. in comb.] a reinforcing layer of fabric in a tire: [as adj.] a six-ply whitewall tire. 2. short for plywood.3. (in game theory) the number of levels at which branching occurs in a tree of possible outcomes, typically corresponding to the number of moves ahead (in chess strictly half-moves ahead) considered by a computer program. ∎ a half-move (i.e., one player's move) in computer chess.ply2 • v. (plies, plied) [tr.] 1. work with (a tool, esp. one requiring steady, rhythmic movements): a tailor delicately plying his needle. ∎ work steadily at (one's business or trade); conduct: he plied a profitable export trade.2. [intr.] (of a vessel or vehicle) travel regularly over a route, typically for commercial purposes: ferries ply across a strait to the island. ∎ [tr.] travel over (a route) in this way: the motion of the big tug as it plied the Jersey coastline.3. (ply someone with) provide someone with (food or drink) in a continuous or insistent way: a flight attendant who plied them with soft drinks. ∎ direct (numerous questions) at someone: the presiding judge plied him with a series of absurd questions.
ply
whence ply vb. bend, lit. and fig. XIV) :— L. plicāre; cf. FOLD2.