a |
1. art. One; any indefinite example of; used to denote a singular item of a group. | |
There was a man here looking for you yesterday. | |
2. art. Used in conjunction with the adjectives score, dozen, hundred, thousand, and million, as a function word. | |
I've seen it happen a hundred times. | |
3. art. One certain or particular; any single.Brown, Lesley, (2003) | |
We've received an interesting letter from a Mrs. Miggins of London. | |
4. art. The same; one. | |
We are of a mind on matters of morals. | |
5. art. Any, every; used before a noun which has become modified to limit its scope; also used with a negative to indicate not a single one.Lindberg, Christine A. (2007) | |
A man who dies intestate leaves his children troubles and difficulties. | |
He fell all that way, and hasn't a bump on his head? | |
6. art. Used before plural nouns modified by few, good many, couple, great many, etc. | |
7. art. Someone or something like; similar to; Used before a proper noun to create an example out of it. | |
The center of the village was becoming a Times Square. | |
8. prep. (archaic) To do with position or direction; In, on, at, by, towards, onto. | |
Stand a tiptoe. | |
9. prep. To do with separation; In, into. | |
Torn a pieces. | |
10. prep. To do with time; Each, per, in, on, by. | |
I brush my teeth twice a day. | |
11. prep. (obsolete) To do with method; In, with. | |
12. prep. (obsolete) To do with role or capacity; In. | |
A God’s name. | |
13. prep. To do with status; In. | |
King James Bible (II Chronicles 2:18) | |
To set the people a worke. | |
14. prep. (archaic) To do with process, with a passive verb; In the course of, experiencing. | |
1964, Bob Dylan, The Times They Are a-Changin’ | |
The times, they are a-changin'. | |
15. prep. (archaic) To do with an action, an active verb; Engaged in. | |
1611, King James Bible, Hebrews 11-21 | |
Jacob, when he was a dying | |
16. prep. (archaic) To do with an action/movement; To, into. | |
17. v. (archaic, or slang) Have. | |
I'd a come, if you'd a asked. | |
18. pron. (obsolete, outside, England, and Scotland dialects) He. | |
19. interj. A meaningless syllable; ah. | |
20. prep. (archaic, slang) Of. | |
The name of John a Gaunt. | |
21. adv. (chiefly Scotland) All. | |
22. adj. (chiefly Scotland) All. | |
snuggle |
1. n. An affectionate hug. | |
2. n. The final remnant left in a liquor bottle. | |
3. v. (transitive, intransitive) To lie close to another person or thing, hugging or being cosy. | |
Sometimes my girlfriend and I snuggle. | |
The surrounding buildings snuggled each other. | |
The last drop of jager snuggled the corner of the pint. | |
4. v. To move or arrange oneself in a comfortable and cosy position. | |
Tired but satisfied, the children snuggled into their sleeping bags. | |
The pet dog snuggles into its new bed. | |
an |
1. art. Form of a used before a vowel sound | |
2. art. (now quite rare) Form of a used before 'h' in an unstressed syllable | |
3. art. (nonstandard) Form of a used before 'h' in a stressed syllable | |
4. conj. (archaic) If | |
5. conj. (archaic) So long as. | |
An it harm none, do what ye will. | |
6. conj. (archaic) As if; as though. | |
7. n. The first letter of the Georgian alphabet, ა (Mkhedruli), Ⴀ (Asomtavruli) or ⴀ (Nuskhuri). | |
8. prep. In each; to or for each; per. | |
I was only going twenty miles an hour. | |
affectionate |
1. adj. (of a person) Having affection or warm regard; loving; fond. | |
She eulogised her always warm and affectionate brother. | |
2. adj. (of an action, etc.) Characterised by or proceeding from affection; indicating love; tender. | |
the affectionate care of a parent; an affectionate countenance; an affectionate message; affectionate language | |
3. adj. (obsolete) Eager; passionate; strongly inclined toward something. | |
4. v. (rare) To show affection to; to have affection for. | |
5. v. (obsolete, reflexive) To emotionally attach (oneself) to. | |
embrace |
1. v. To clasp (someone or each other) in the arms with affection; to take in the arms; to hug. | |
2. v. (obsolete) To accept (someone) as a friend or servant. | |
3. v. To seize (something) eagerly, or with alacrity; to accept with cordiality; to welcome. | |
I wholeheartedly embrace the new legislation. | |
4. v. To accept; to undergo; to submit to. | |
5. v. To encircle; to encompass; to enclose. | |
6. v. (figurative) To enfold, to include (ideas, principles, etc.); to encompass. | |
Natural philosophy embraces many sciences. | |
7. v. (obsolete) To fasten on, as armour. | |
8. v. (legal) To attempt to influence (a jury, court, etc.) corruptly; to practise embracery. | |
9. n. Hug (noun); putting arms around someone. | |
10. n. Enclosure, (partially or fully) surrounding someone or something. | |
11. n. Full acceptance (of something). | |
12. n. (figuratively) Enfolding, including. | |
often |
1. adv. Frequently, many times. | |
I often walk to work when the weather is nice. | |
I've been going to the movies more often since a new theatre opened near me. | |
2. adj. (archaic) Frequent. | |
given |
1. v. past participle of give | |
2. prep. Considering; taking into account. | |
Given the current situation, I don't think that's possible. | |
3. n. A condition that is assumed to be true without further evaluation. | |
When evaluating this math problem, don't forget to read the givens. | |
4. adj. Particular, specific. | |
No more than three people can be in that space at a given time. | |
5. adj. Assumed as fact or hypothesis. | |
Given that we will get the resources, what do we want to achieve? | |
6. adj. (with to) Prone, disposed. | |
He was given to taking a couple of glasses of port at his club. | |
give |
1. v. (ditransitive) To move, shift, provide something abstract or concrete to someone or something or somewhere. | |
2. v. To transfer one's possession or holding of (something) to (someone). | |
I gave him my coat. | |
I gave my coat to the beggar. | |
When they asked, I gave my coat. | |
3. v. To make a present or gift of. | |
I'm going to give my wife a necklace for her birthday. | |
She gave a pair of shoes to her husband for their anniversary. | |
He gives of his energies to the organization. | |
4. v. To pledge. | |
I gave him my word that I'd protect his children. | |
5. v. To provide (something) to (someone), to allow or afford. | |
I gave them permission to miss tomorrow's class. | |
Please give me some more time. | |
6. v. To cause (a sensation or feeling) to exist in. | |
It gives me a lot of pleasure to be here tonight. | |
The fence gave me an electric shock. | |
My mother-in-law gives me nothing but grief. | |
7. v. To carry out (a physical interaction) with (something). | |
I want to give you a kiss. | |
She gave him a hug. | |
I'd like to give the tire a kick. | |
I gave the boy a push on the swing. | |
She gave me a wink afterwards, so I knew she was joking. | |
8. v. To pass (something) into (someone's) hand or the like. | |
Give me your hand. | |
On entering the house, he gave his coat to the doorman. | |
9. v. To cause (a disease or condition) in, or to transmit (a disease or condition) to. | |
My boyfriend gave me chlamydia. | |
He was convinced that it was his alcoholism that gave him cancer. | |
10. v. (ditransitive) To estimate or predict (a duration or probability) for (something). | |
I give it ten minutes before he gives up. | |
I give it a 95% chance of success. | |
I'll give their marriage six months. | |
11. v. (intransitive) To yield slightly when a force is applied. | |
12. v. (intransitive) To collapse under pressure or force. | |
One pillar gave, then more, and suddenly the whole floor pancaked onto the floor below. | |
13. v. To provide, as, a service or a broadcast. | |
They're giving my favorite show! | |
14. v. (intransitive) To lead (onto or into). | |
The master bedroom gives onto a spacious balcony. | |
15. v. (transitive, dated) To provide a view of. | |
His window gave the park. | |
16. v. To exhibit as a product or result; to produce; to yield. | |
The number of men, divided by the number of ships, gives four hundred to each ship. | |
17. v. To cause; to make; used with the infinitive. | |
18. v. To cause (someone) to have; produce in (someone); effectuate. | |
19. v. To allow or admit by way of supposition; to concede. | |
He can be bad-tempered, I'll give you that, but he's a hard worker. | |
20. v. To attribute; to assign; to adjudge. | |
21. v. To communicate or announce (advice, tidings, etc.); to pronounce or utter (an opinion, a judgment, a shout, etc.). | |
22. v. (dated) To grant power or permission to; to allow. | |
23. v. (reflexive) To devote or apply (oneself). | |
The soldiers give themselves to plunder. | |
That boy is given to fits of bad temper. | |
24. v. (obsolete) To become soft or moist. | |
25. v. (obsolete) To shed tears; to weep. | |
26. v. (obsolete) To have a misgiving. | |
27. v. To be going on, to be occurring | |
What gives? | |
28. n. The amount of bending that something undergoes when a force is applied to it; a tendency to yield under pressure; resilence. | |
This chair doesn't have much give. | |
There is no give in his dogmatic religious beliefs. | |
to |
1. part. A particle used for marking the following verb as an infinitive. | |
I want to leave. | |
He asked me what to do. | |
I don’t know how to say it. | |
I have places to go and people to see. | |
2. part. As above, with the verb implied. | |
"Did you visit the museum?" "I wanted to, but it was closed.". | |
If he hasn't read it yet, he ought to. | |
3. part. A particle used to create phrasal verbs. | |
I have to do laundry today. | |
4. prep. Indicating destination: In the direction of, and arriving at. | |
We are walking to the shop. | |
5. prep. Used to indicate purpose. | |
He devoted himself to education. | |
They drank to his health. | |
6. prep. Used to indicate result of action. | |
His face was beaten to a pulp. | |
7. prep. Used after an adjective to indicate its application. | |
similar to ..., relevant to ..., pertinent to ..., I was nice to him, he was cruel to her, I am used to walking. | |
8. prep. (obsolete,) As a. | |
With God to friend (with God as a friend); with The Devil to fiend (with the Devil as a foe); lambs slaughtered to lake (lambs slaughtered as a sacrifice); t | |
9. prep. (arithmetic) Used to indicate a ratio or comparison. | |
one to one = 1:1 | |
ten to one = 10:1. | |
I have ten dollars to your four. | |
10. prep. (arithmetic) Used to indicate that the preceding term is to be raised to the power of the following value; indicates exponentiation. | |
Three squared or three to the second power is nine. | |
Three to the power of two is nine. | |
Three to the second is nine. | |
11. prep. Used to indicate the indirect object. | |
I gave the book to him. | |
12. prep. (time) Preceding. | |
ten to ten = 9:50; We're going to leave at ten to (the hour). | |
13. prep. Used to describe what something consists of or contains. | |
Anyone could do this job; there's nothing to it. | |
There's a lot of sense to what he says. | |
14. prep. (Canada, UK, Newfoundland, West Midlands) At. | |
Stay where you're to and I'll come find you, b'y. | |
15. adv. Toward a closed, touching or engaging position. | |
Please push the door to. | |
16. adv. (nautical) Into the wind. | |
17. adv. misspelling of too | |
family |
1. n. A group of people who are closely related to one another (by blood, marriage or adoption); kin; for example, a set of parents and their children; an immediate family. | |
Our family lives in town. | |
2. n. An extended family; a group of people who are related to one another by blood or marriage. | |
3. n. A (close-knit) group of people related by blood, friendship, marriage, law, or custom, especially if they live or work together. | |
crime family, Mafia family | |
This is my fraternity family at the university. | |
Our company is one big happy family. | |
4. n. (taxonomy) A rank in the classification of organisms, below order and above genus; a taxon at that rank. | |
Magnolias belong to the family Magnoliaceae. | |
5. n. Any group or aggregation of things classed together as kindred or related from possessing in common characteristics which distinguish them from other things of the same order. | |
Doliracetam is a drug from the racetam family. | |
6. n. (music) A group of instruments having the same basic method of tone production. | |
the brass family; the violin family | |
7. n. (linguistics) A group of languages believed to have descended from the same ancestral language. | |
the Indo-European language family; the Afro-Asiatic language family | |
8. n. Used attributively. | |
The dog was kept as a family pet. | |
For Apocynaceae, this type of flower is a family characteristic. | |
9. adj. Suitable for children and adults. | |
It's not good for a date, it's a family restaurant. | |
Some animated movies are not just for kids, they are family movies. | |
10. adj. Conservative, traditional. | |
The cultural struggle is for the survival of family values against all manner of atheistic amorality. | |
11. adj. (slang) Homosexual. | |
I knew he was family when I first met him. | |
members |
1. n. plural of member | |
member |
1. n. One who officially belongs to a group. | |
2. n. A part of a whole. | |
The I-beams were to become structural members of a pedestrian bridge. | |
3. n. Part of an animal capable of performing a distinct office; an organ; a limb. | |
4. n. (euphemism) The penis. | |
5. n. (logic) One of the propositions making up a syllogism. | |
6. n. (set theory) An element of a set. | |
7. n. (object-oriented programming) A function or piece of data associated with each separate instance of a class. | |
8. n. (AU, law) the judge or adjudicator in a consumer court. | |
9. n. A part of a discourse or of a period, sentence, or verse; a clause. | |
10. n. (math) Either of the two parts of an algebraic equation, connected by the equality sign. | |
11. n. (computing) A file stored within an archive file. | |
The zip file holding the source code of this application has 245 members. | |
12. v. (obsolete, outside, dialects) To remember. | |
13. v. (obsolete) To cause to remember; to mention. | |
and |
1. conj. As a coordinating conjunction; expressing two elements to be taken together or in addition to each other. | |
2. conj. Used simply to connect two noun phrases, adjectives or adverbs. | |
3. conj. Simply connecting two clauses or sentences. | |
4. conj. Introducing a clause or sentence which follows on in time or consequence from the first. | |
5. conj. (obsolete) Yet; but. | |
6. conj. Used to connect certain numbers: connecting units when they precede tens (not dated); connecting tens and units to hundreds, thousands etc. (now often | |
7. conj. (now colloquial, or literary) Used to connect more than two elements together in a chain, sometimes to stress the number of elements. | |
8. conj. Connecting two identical elements, with implications of continued or infinite repetition. | |
9. conj. Introducing a parenthetical or explanatory clause. | |
10. conj. Introducing the continuation of narration from a previous understood point; also used alone as a question: ‘and so what?’. | |
11. conj. (now regional or somewhat colloquial) Used to connect two verbs where the second is dependent on the first: ‘to’. Used especially after come, | |
12. conj. Introducing a qualitative difference between things having the same name; "as well as other". | |
13. conj. Used to combine numbers in addition; plus (with singular or plural verb). | |
14. conj. Expressing a condition.: | |
15. conj. (now US dialect) If; provided that. | |
16. conj. (obsolete) As if, as though. | |
17. n. (enm, music, often informal) In rhythm, the second half of a divided beat. | |
18. n. (UK dialectal) Breath. | |
19. n. (UK dialectal) Sea smoke; steam fog. | |
20. v. (UK dialectal, intransitive) To breathe; whisper; devise; imagine. | |
close |
1. v. (physical) To remove a gap. | |
2. v. To obstruct (an opening). | |
3. v. To move so that an opening is closed. | |
Close the door behind you when you leave. | |
Jim was listening to headphones with his eyes closed. | |
4. v. To make (e.g. a gap) smaller. | |
The runner in second place is closing the gap on the leader. | |
to close the ranks of an army | |
5. v. To grapple; to engage in close combat. | |
6. v. (social) To finish, to terminate. | |
7. v. To put an end to; to conclude; to complete; to finish; to consummate. | |
close the session; to close a bargain; to close a course of instruction | |
8. v. To come to an end. | |
The debate closed at six o'clock. | |
9. v. (marketing) To make a sale. | |
10. v. (baseball, pitching) To make the final outs, usually three, of a game. | |
He has closed the last two games for his team. | |
11. v. (figurative, computing) To terminate an application, window, file or database connection, etc. | |
12. v. To come or gather around; to enclose; to encompass; to confine. | |
13. v. (surveying) To have a vector sum of 0; that is, to form a closed polygon. | |
14. n. An end or conclusion. | |
We owe them our thanks for bringing the project to a successful close. | |
15. n. The manner of shutting; the union of parts; junction. | |
16. n. A grapple in wrestling. | |
17. n. (music) The conclusion of a strain of music; cadence. | |
18. n. (music) A double bar marking the end. | |
19. adj. (now rare) Closed, shut. | |
20. adj. Narrow; confined. | |
a close alley; close quarters | |
21. adj. At a little distance; near. | |
Is your house close? | |
22. adj. Intimate; well-loved. | |
He is a close friend. | |
23. adj. (legal) Of a corporation or other business entity, closely held. | |
24. adj. Oppressive; without motion or ventilation; causing a feeling of lassitude. | |
25. adj. (Ireland, England, Scotland, weather) Hot, humid, with no wind. | |
26. adj. (linguistics, phonetics, of a vowel) Articulated with the tongue body relatively close to the hard palate. | |
27. adj. Strictly confined; carefully guarded. | |
a close prisoner | |
28. adj. (obsolete) Out of the way of observation; secluded; secret; hidden. | |
29. adj. Nearly equal; almost evenly balanced. | |
a close contest | |
30. adj. Short. | |
to cut grass or hair close | |
31. adj. (archaic) Dense; solid; compact. | |
32. adj. (archaic) Concise; to the point. | |
close reasoning | |
33. adj. (dated) Difficult to obtain. | |
Money is close. | |
34. adj. (dated) Parsimonious; stingy. | |
35. adj. Adhering strictly to a standard or original; exact. | |
a close translation | |
36. adj. Accurate; careful; precise; also, attentive; undeviating; strict. | |
The patient was kept under close observation. | |
37. adj. Marked, evident. | |
38. n. (now rare) An enclosed field. | |
39. n. (British) A street that ends in a dead end. | |
40. n. (Scotland) A very narrow alley between two buildings, often overhung by one of the buildings above the ground floor. | |
41. n. (Scotland) The common staircase in a tenement. | |
42. n. A cathedral close. | |
43. n. (legal) The interest which one may have in a piece of ground, even though it is not enclosed. | |
Friends |
1. n. plural of Friend | |
2. n. plural of friend | |
3. n. Participants in a two-way friendship relationship. | |
I tried to be a friend to Jane but we never really made friends. She was never a friend to me. | |
Jane and I made friends right away. | |
We became friends in the war and remain friends to this day. | |
We were friends with some girls from the other school and stayed friends with them. | |
4. v. third-person singular present indicative of friend | |
friend |
1. n. A person other than a family member, spouse or lover whose company one enjoys and towards whom one feels affection. | |
John and I have been friends ever since we were roommates at college. Trust is important between friends. I used to find it hard to make friends when I was shy. | |
2. n. A boyfriend or girlfriend. | |
3. n. An associate who provides assistance. | |
The Automobile Association is every motorist's friend. The police is every law-abiding citizen's friend. | |
4. n. A person with whom one is vaguely or indirectly acquainted | |
a friend of a friend; I added him as a friend on Facebook, but I hardly know him. | |
5. n. A person who backs or supports something. | |
I’m not a friend of cheap wine. | |
6. n. (informal) An object or idea that can be used for good. | |
Wiktionary is your friend. | |
7. n. (colloquial, ironic, used only in the vocative) Used as a form of address when warning someone. | |
You’d better watch it, friend. | |
8. n. (object-oriented programming) A function or class granted special access to the private and protected members of another class. | |
9. n. (climbing) A spring-loaded camming device. | |
10. n. (obsolete) A paramour of either sex. | |
11. n. (Scotland, obsolete) A relative. | |
12. v. (transitive, obsolete) To act as a friend to, to befriend; to be friendly to, to help. | |
13. v. To add (a person) to a list of friends on a social networking site; to officially designate (someone) as a friend. | |