n. One of the two lower limbs of man, or any one of the limbs of an animal which support and move the body.n. Some object resembling a leg in use, position, or appearance: as, the legs of a table or chair; the legs of a pair of dividers; the legs of a triangle (the sides, as opposed to the base, especially the sides adjacent to a right angle); the leg of an angle, or of a hyperbola.n. Hence Something that serves for support, moral or physical.n. The part of a pair of trousers or drawers, or of a stocking, that covers the leg.n. In cricket:n. The part of the field that lies to the left of and behind the batsman as he faces the bowler: as, to strike a ball to leg.n. The fielder who occupies that part of the field known as leg. Also long-leg.n. A sharper: same as black-leg, 3.n. Naut.: The run made by a ship on one tack when beating to windward.n. One of two Small ropes spliced together, by which a buntline or leech-line is fastened to the foot or leech of a sail.To pass on; walk or run nimbly: often with an indefinite it.To make a reverence.An abbreviation of legato.n. In telephony, a wire used for connecting a subscriber's line directly with the main switchboard.n. Same as water-leg.n. In machinery: The movable case which contains the bucket-belt or -conveyer of a grain-elevator.n. The tube in which the grain is lifted into an elevator.n. In mining, a peculiar form of quartz-reef, forming a nearly vertical prolongation of the saddle.n. A tongue-like portion of some geologic formation which projects from the main mass or intrudes others. The term is a local one used in England for such relationship in different drift deposits.n. A play in which ‘leg-business’ is a prominent feature.n. His position in the field.n. An abbreviation of legislative or legislature; of legal; of legate; of the Latin legit, he reads; of legunt, they read.