sheet
sheet1 / shēt/ • n. 1. a large rectangular piece of cotton or other fabric, used on a bed to cover the mattress and as a layer beneath blankets when these are used. ∎ used in comparisons to describe the pallor of a person who is ill or has had a shock: Are you OK? You're as white as a sheet. ∎ a broad flat piece of material such as metal or glass: the small pipe has been formed from a flat sheet of bronze.2. a rectangular piece of paper, esp. one of a standard size produced commercially and used for writing and printing on: a sheet of unmarked paper. ∎ a quantity of text or other information contained on such a piece of paper: he produced yet another sheet of figures. ∎ a flat piece of paper as opposed to a reel of continuous paper, the bound pages of a book, or a folded map. ∎ all the postage stamps printed on one piece of paper: a sheet of stamps. ∎ a map, esp. one part of a series covering a larger area.3. an extensive unbroken surface area of something: a sheet of ice. ∎ a broad moving mass of flames or water: the rain was still falling in sheets.• v. 1. [tr.] cover with or wrap in a sheet or sheets: we sheeted a narrow bed.2. [intr.] (of rain) fall in large quantities: rain sheeted down.sheet2 Naut. • n. 1. a rope attached to the lower corner of a sail for securing or extending the sail or for altering its direction.2. (sheets) the space at the bow or stern of an open boat.• v. [tr.] (sheet something in/out) make a sail more or less taut. ∎ (sheet something home) extend a sail by tightening the sheets so that the sail is set as flat as possible.PHRASES: two (or three) sheets to the wind inf. drunk.
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See also sing from the same hymn sheet, three sheets in the wind.