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Showing words for GRAVES using the English dictionary
6 Letter Words for Graves
5 Letter Words for Graves
4 Letter Words for Graves
3 Letter Words for Graves
Definitions for Graves
[1] a wine-growing district in Gironde department, in SW France.
[2] a dry, red or white table wine produced in this region.
[3] Morris, 1910–2001, U.S. painter.
[4] Robert (Ran·ke) [rahng -kuh ] /ˈrɑŋ kə/ , 1895–1985, English poet, novelist, and critic.
[5] an excavation made in the earth in which to bury a dead body.
[6] any place of interment; a tomb or sepulcher: a watery grave.
[7] any place that becomes the receptacle of what is dead, lost, or past: the grave of unfulfilled ambitions.
[8] death: O grave, where is thy victory?
[9] serious or solemn; sober: a grave person; grave thoughts.
[10] weighty, momentous, or important: grave responsibilities.
[11] threatening a seriously bad outcome or involving serious issues; critical: a grave situation; a grave illness.
[12] Grammar . unaccented. spoken on a low or falling pitch. noting or having a particular accent (`) indicating originally a comparatively low pitch (as in French père ), distinct syllabic value (as in English belovèd ), etc. (opposed to acute).
[13] (of colors) dull; somber.
[14] the grave accent.
[15] to carve, sculpt, or engrave.
[16] to impress deeply: graven on the mind.
[17] to clean and apply a protective composition of tar to (the bottom of a ship).
[18] (sometimes not capital) a white or red wine from the district around Bordeaux, France
[19] Robert (Ranke ). 1895–1985, English poet, novelist, and critic, whose works include his World War I autobiography, Goodbye to All That (1929), and the historical novels I, Claudius (1934) and Claudius the God (1934)
[20] a place for the burial of a corpse, esp beneath the ground and usually marked by a tombstone Related adjective: sepulchral
[21] something resembling a grave or resting place the ship went to its grave
[22] the grave a poetic term for death
[23] have one foot in the grave informal to be near death
[24] to make someone turn in his grave or to make someone turn over in his grave to do something that would have shocked or distressed (someone now dead) many modern dictionaries would make Dr Johnson turn in his grave
[25] serious and solemn a grave look
[26] full of or suggesting danger a grave situation
[27] important; crucial grave matters of state
[28] (of colours) sober or dull
[29] phonetics (of a vowel or syllable in some languages with a pitch accent, such as ancient Greek) spoken on a lower or falling musical pitch relative to neighbouring syllables or vowels of or relating to an accent (`) over vowels, denoting a pronunciation with lower or falling musical pitch (as in ancient Greek), with certain special quality (as in French), or in a manner that gives the vowel status as a syllable nucleus not usually possessed by it in that position (as in English agèd ) Compare acute (def. 8), circumflex
[30] a grave accent
[31] to cut, carve, sculpt, or engrave
[32] to fix firmly in the mind
[33] (tr) nautical to clean and apply a coating of pitch to (the bottom of a vessel)
[34] music to be performed in a solemn manner
Words related to Graves
heavy, subdued, sage, quiet, earnest, sedate, sober, dull, dignified, muted, acute, major, threatening, pressing, killing, fell, crypt, sepulcher, catacomb, shrine
Origin of Graves
41425–75; late Middle English; perhaps akin to gravel
Words that may be confused with Graves
WORDS, THAT, MAY, BE, CONFUSED, WITH, gravegravely, gravelly
Other words from Graves
grave·less , adjective
grave·like , adjective
grave·ward , grave·wards , adverb, adjective
grave·ly , adverb
grave·ness , noun
un·grave·ly , adverb
grav·er , noun
Word origin for Graves
C17: from Italian: heavy, from Latin gravis
Synonyms for Graves
dignified, dull, earnest, heavy, muted, quiet, sage, sedate, sober, subdued, cold sober, deadpan, dour, grim, grim-faced, leaden, long-faced, meaningful, no-nonsense, ponderous, sad, saturnine, solemn, somber, staid, strictly business, thoughtful, unsmiling