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lifeline

noun

  1. rope to save fallen person
  2. assistance in emergency
L37085 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈlaɪfˌlaɪn/

noun

Etymology: From life + line.

  1. A line to which a drowning or falling victim may cling.
  2. A source of salvation in a crisis.

    The girls, of course, were my lifeline during this time.

    Slowly I began to fill up some of the emptiness inside—writing had become my lifeline.

  3. A means or route for transporting indispensable supplies.

    Planners did not see the access routes as west Berlin's sole lifeline, which now seems instinctive to us.

    It is no real surprise that half the UK's stations and 5,000 miles of route were recommended to close. Nevertheless, some great mistakes were made in Marples' devil-may-care purge that left commuters stranded and seaside resorts without a lifeline.

  4. A system or structure of vital importance to a community.
  5. On the deck of a boat, a line to which one can attach oneself to stay aboard on rough seas.
  6. A line from the diver to a tender at the surface control point.
  7. A particular crease in the palm.