Lining in a sentence as a noun

I mean, HackerNews is lining up against them.

If lining up comments makes them easier to read then lining up anything makes it easier to read.

There area lot of folks with great credentials who are lining up to create "jobs" programs that will have very poor results.

When you see it, start lining up interviews immediately.

And the soundwalls lining the surface parts of the railway line aren't that captivating either.

With my letter of acceptance, and an offer of full scholarship in hand, I braced the throngs of my countrymen lining up at the American embassy.

No matter what your views of privacy and anonymity, to me it's fascinating from simply a technology standpoint to watch all the pieces slowly lining up.

So I don't care what amazing new stuff you might be lining up, I won't use them until all of the functionality I use in Firebug is also available in FF's builtins.

You'll spend another 30 seconds lining up the little on-screen window with the code, rotating things, waiting for the camera to focus, and even having to move to another location if you're not in bright lighting.

In hindsight, it's totally obvious that this was a trick to let the game designers choose whether or not to put a secret passageway behind a particular item room just by lining up a different room next to it!Once you get this, you see it everywhere in the world.

As much as everyone wants to think doctors are only interested in lining their pockets, the reality is that most of us simply don't want your grandparent going blind in one eye because a minimum-wage tech at a compounding pharmacy failed to follow appropriate sterile procedure.

Your script is longer than a few hundred lines of code\n you need data structures beyond simple arrays\n you have a hard time working around quoting issues\n you do a lot of string manipulation\n you do not have much need for invoking other programs or pipe-lining them\n you worry about performance\n\nIt's not a sign you shouldn't be using bash.

Lining definitions

noun

a protective covering that protects an inside surface

See also: liner

noun

a piece of cloth that is used as the inside surface of a garment

See also: liner

noun

providing something with a surface of a different material

See also: facing

noun

the act of attaching an inside lining (to a garment or curtain etc.)