different between logline vs loline

logline

English

Alternative forms

  • logge-line, log lyne, logg line, logg-line, loggline (all obsolete)
  • log line, log-line

Etymology

First attested in 1613 as logge-line. A compound of log +? line.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?l??.la?n/

Noun

logline (plural loglines)

  1. (authorship) A very short summary of a script or screenplay.
    Coordinate term: elevator pitch
    • 2013, Xander Bennett, Screenwriting Tips, You Hack (page 16)
      Screenwriting Tip #12: If you don't know your own logline, you probably don't know what your script is about. Some writers will tell you they don't have a logline. Their screenplay is “too complex” or “too character-driven,” []
    • 2013, Linda Venis, Cut to the Chase: Writing Feature Films with the Pros at UCLA Extension Writers' Program, Penguin (?ISBN)
      The first step in outlining is to make sure that your logline, that one-or-two- sentence summary of your movie you first created in chapter 2 (“Jump-starting the Screenplay”), is the best that it can be in capturing what your movie is about now.
  2. (nautical) The line fastened to the log, and marked for finding the speed of a vessel.
    • 1613, Mark Ridley, A Short Treatise of Magneticall Bodies and Motions
      Besides the ingenious Pilot knowing the elevation of the Pole in some places of his voyage that he hath passed, by keeping a true, not a dead reckoning of his course in pricking his Card aright, and observing the way with the logge-line, with other currants, will give a very artificiall conjecture of the elevation of the pole in that place where he is, though he sec neither Sunne nor Starres.
    • 1627, John Smith, A sea grammar with the plaine exposition of Smiths Accidence for young sea-men, enlarged
      Bring the ship to rights, that is, againe under saile as she was, some use a Log line, and a minute glasse to know what way shee makes, but that is so uncertaine, it is not worth the la­bour to trie it.
    • 1659, John Collins, Navigation by the Mariners Plain Scale New Plain'd
      The 120th part of that Mile is 41? feet, and so much is the space betweene the Knots upon the Log-line: So many Knots as the ship runs in half a minute, so many Miles she sayleth in an hour; or so many Leagues, and so many Miles she runneth in a Watch or four hours, called A Watch, because one half of the Ships Company watcheth by turns, and changes every four hours.

Related terms

  • heave the log

Translations

See also

  • plotline

logline From the web:

  • what's logline in french
  • what is logline in script writing
  • what's a logline in movies
  • what is logline in film
  • what does logline mean
  • what is logline synopsis
  • log linear analysis
  • log linear regression


loline

English

Etymology

So named because it is found in Lolium. (Its synonym "festucine" reflects its presence in Festuca.)

Noun

loline (plural lolines)

  1. (organic chemistry) festucine or any of several similar alkaloids
    • 1991, Abdel-Fattah M. Rizk, Poisonous plant contamination of edible plants, page 96:
      Hydrolysis of lolidine yields loline and norloline:
      []
      MS and NMR spectra of loline from L. cunneatum and festucine from Festuca arundinacea showed that both alkaloids are identical.

See also

  • norloline, lolidine

Anagrams

  • Lionel, O'Neill, lionel, niello, nollie

loline From the web:

  • causes of loneliness
  • what are the main causes of loneliness
  • what can cause loneliness
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