释义 |
grave I. grave \ˈgrāv\ verb (graved \-vd\ ; grav·en \-vən\ ; or graved ; graving ; graves) Etymology: Middle English graven, from Old English grafan; akin to Old High German & Gothic graban to dig, Old Norse grafa, Old Slavic pogreti to bury transitive verb 1. archaic : dig, excavate 2. a. : to carve out or give shape to by cutting with a chisel : sculpture < they graved the figure of a calf > b. : to carve or cut (as letters or figures) on some hard substance : engrave < graved the date of his death on the blank space on the stone > c. : to remove (some portion of a printing surface) by cutting (as with a burin) — used with out < grave out the redundant comma > 3. : to impress (as a thought) deeply : fix indelibly < you could do worse than grave his noble words in your mind > intransitive verb 1. archaic : excavate, dig 2. a. : carve 2 b. : to practice engraving II. grave noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English græf; akin to Old High German grab grave, Old Norse gröf; derivatives, from the root of Old English grafan to dig 1. a. : an excavation in the earth for use as a place of burial; broadly : a place of interment : tomb, sepulcher b. : a final ending (as by death or destruction) < the grave comes to all men > < the grave of all our hopes > 2. a. obsolete : an excavated pit, ditch, or trench b. now dialect England : a storage clamp; especially : one dug partly into the ground III. grave noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Middle Dutch grāve, grēve — more at burgrave 1. obsolete : steward, overseer 2. : a former elective township officer in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, England IV. grave transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English graven : to clean (the bottom of a wooden ship) of encrusting growths and treat with pitch — see graving dock V. grave \“, in sense 6 “ or ˈgräv or ˈgrȧv\ adjective (-er/-est) Etymology: Middle French, from Latin gravis heavy — more at grieve 1. a. obsolete, of a person : occupying a position of consequence and dignity b. obsolete : based on knowledge and understanding : authoritative c. : deserving serious consideration or thought : important, weighty < a grave issue > d. (1) : involving or resulting in serious consequences : likely to produce real harm or damage < a grave wrong > < ran a very grave risk > (2) : very serious : dangerous to life — used of an illness or its prospects < a grave disease > < a grave prognosis > 2. : having a serious, sedate, and dignified appearance or demeanor < watching his grave face > < a grave man little given to anger > 3. archaic : of great weight : heavy 4. : dull in color : somber, sober, drab < the grave plain dress of the countryfolk > 5. of a sound : low in pitch — contrasted with acute 6. a. of an accent mark : having the form ` b. : marked with a grave accent < a grave e in caffè > c. : of the variety indicated by a grave accent < a grave intonation > Synonyms: see serious VI. grave \ˈgrāv, -ä-, -ȧ-\ noun (-s) : a grave accent ` used to show that a vowel is pronounced with a fall of pitch (as in ancient Greek), that a vowel has a certain quality (as over e in French), that a final e is stressed and close and that a final o is stressed and open (as in Italian), that a syllable has a degree of stress between maximum and minimum (as in phonetic transcription), or that the e of the English ending -ed is in a line of poetry not silent but is to be pronounced \ə̇\ for the sake of the meter (as in “this cursèd day”) VII. gra·ve \ˈgrä(ˌ)vā, -rȧ(-\ adverb (or adjective) Etymology: Italian, heavy, grave, from Latin gravis : slowly and solemnly — used as a direction in music |