timeline
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtaɪmˌlaɪn/
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
timeline (plural timelines)
- A graphical representation of a chronological sequence of events (past or future).
- Synonym: chronology
- Antonym: timepoint
- Coordinate terms: timespan, time frame
- 2015, “Energy”, in If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late, performed by Drake:
- I got bitches askin' me about the code for the Wi-Fi / So they can talk about they timeline / And show me pictures of they friends
- 2023 February 8, Andrew Mourant, “A serious shuttle service with options to Taunton and beyond”, in RAIL, number 976, page 31:
- But, as things stand, there's no timeline in place for reopening.
- A schedule of activities; a timetable.
- (originally science fiction) An individual universe or reality, especially a parallel/alternate one in which events differ from actual history, or differ from the established canon of a fictional world.
- Synonyms: timestream, time track
- on an alternate timeline
- 1997 May 5, Children of Time (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine), season 5, number 22 (Science Fiction), Paramount Domestic Television, →OCLC:
- SISKO: I don't quite know how to say this... but now that we know about the accident that sent the ship back in time, we should be able to avoid it.
WORF: Well if we do that, your timeline will collapse and everything here will cease to exist.
- 2025 May 16, Ezra Klein, “Is Trump Losing? A Debate.”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- So in that sense, if we want to talk about the timeline of what it would mean for Trump to be winning and reshifting the Constitutional order, part of what I think about is: If the neoliberal order is cracked, as Gerstle says it is, then the question is: What will succeed it?
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
graphical representation of a chronological sequence of events
|
schedule of activities
|
Verb
timeline (third-person singular simple present timelines, present participle timelining, simple past and past participle timelined)
- To analyse a sequence of events or activities.
- To display such a sequence graphically.
Anagrams
Spanish
Noun
timeline f (plural timelines)