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castSee casting, broadcast, unicast, multicast and anycast. cast 1. a. a throw at dice b. the resulting number shown 2. Angling a. a trace with a fly or flies attached b. the act or an instance of casting 3. a. the actors in a play collectively b. (as modifier): a cast list 4. a. an object made of metal, glass, etc., that has been shaped in a molten state by being poured or pressed into a mould b. the mould used to shape such an object 5. a fixed twist or defect, esp in the eye 6. Surgery a rigid encircling casing, often made of plaster of Paris, for immobilizing broken bones while they heal 7. Pathol a mass of fatty, waxy, cellular, or other material formed in a diseased body cavity, passage, etc. 8. the act of casting a pack of hounds 9. Falconry a pair of falcons working in combination to pursue the same quarry 10. Archery the speed imparted to an arrow by a particular bow 11. a computation or calculation 12. Palaeontol a replica of an organic object made of nonorganic material, esp a lump of sediment that indicates the internal or external surface of a shell or skeleton 13. Palaeontol a sedimentary structure representing the infilling of a mark or depression in a soft layer of sediment (or bed)
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Current methods of coating a surface or casting around a solid insert generally are expensive and prone to difficulties associated with maintaining the joint between the surface coating or insert and the bulk casting. The company has been casting around for new businesses, including a 2004 purchase of Classmates. Western companies, already having taken the plum oil resources, are casting around what is left, which explains why they are becoming involved in deals with countries that are in Washington's bad books (and, in some cases, most other states' too), as well as going into the less thoroughly developed area of natural gas. |
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