British English

heart

heart [noun] (EMOTIONS)
US /hɑːrt/ 
UK /hɑːt/ 
Example: 

I love you, and I mean it from the bottom of my heart

Oxford Essential Dictionary

heart

 noun

pronunciation
The word heart sounds like start.

1 the part of the body that makes the blood go round inside:
Your heart beats faster when you run.

2 your feelings:
She has a kind heart (= she is kind).

3 the centre; the middle part:
They live in the heart of the countryside.

4 the shape (below)

5 hearts (plural) the group of playing cards (called a suit) that have red shapes like hearts on them:
the six of hearts

break somebody's heart to make somebody very sad:
It broke his heart when his wife died.

by heart so that you know every word:
I have learned the poem by heart.

lose heart to stop hoping:
Don't lose heart – you can still win if you try.

your heart sinks you suddenly feel unhappy:
My heart sank when I saw the first question on the exam paper.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

heart

heart S1 W1 /hɑːt $ hɑːrt/ BrE AmE noun
[Word Family: adjective: heartened ≠ disheartened, heartening ≠ disheartening, heartless, hearty; noun: heart, heartlessness, heartiness; adverb: heartily, heartlessly, hearteningly ≠ dishearteningly; verb: hearten ≠ dishearten]
[Language: Old English; Origin: heorte]

1. BODY ORGAN [countable] the organ in your chest which pumps blood through your body:
Regular exercise is good for the heart.
Can you hear my heart beating?
Her cheeks were hot and her heart was pounding.
My heart raced. Were we going to land safely?
Daniel had no history of heart problems.
She suffers from a rare heart condition.
His breathing and heart rate were now normal.
2. EMOTIONS/LOVE [countable] the part of you that feels strong emotions and feelings:
His heart was full of anger and grief.
The plight of the refugees had tugged at the nation’s heart.
The doctor had an extremely kind heart.
She could hardly speak for the ache in her heart.
It would break Kate’s heart (=make her extremely sad) to leave the lovely old house.
He left the country with a heavy heart (=great sadness).
Edith loved her boy with all her heart and soul.
I was still pretty innocent then when it came to affairs of the heart (=matters relating to love and sex).
a woman with a heart of gold (=very kind character)
Sometimes I think he’s got a heart of stone (=very cruel character).
I’m glad I followed my heart rather than my head for once.
My father told me never to let my heart rule my head.
kind-hearted/cold-hearted/hard-hearted etc (=having a kind, unkind, cruel etc character)
He thinks of himself as a warm-hearted and caring human being.
3. YOUR CHEST [countable usually singular] the part of your chest near your heart:
He put his hand on his heart.
4. SHAPE [countable] a shape used to represent a heart
5. from the (bottom of your) heart with great sincerity and strength of feeling:
Leonard spoke from the heart.
I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart.
She sang the songs straight from the heart.
6. in your heart (of hearts) if you know, feel, or believe something in your heart, you are secretly sure about it although you may not admit it:
In her heart she knew she would never go.
Deep in his heart, he wanted Laura back.
7. IMPORTANT PART OF SOMETHING [singular] the most important or central part of a problem, question etc
the heart of something
difficult issues at the heart of science policy
We must get to the heart of the problem.
8. ENCOURAGEMENT [uncountable] confidence and courage:
This inspiring service gave us new heart.
We mustn’t lose heart when people complain.
We’ve got to take a bit of heart from the fact that we won.
9. at heart if you are a particular kind of person at heart, that is the kind of person that you really are even though you may appear or behave differently:
He may be a working class boy at heart, but his lifestyle has been transformed.
Let’s face it, we’re all romantics at heart. ⇨ have sb’s (best) interests at heart at interest1(5), ⇨ young at heart at young1(5)
10. THE CENTRE OF AN AREA [countable] the middle part of an area furthest from the edge
in the heart of something
a house in the heart of London
at the heart of something
an old house at the heart of an ancient forest
11. close/dear to sb’s heart very important to someone:
The President liked to go to Williamsburg, a place close to his heart.
Money is dear to Kathleen’s heart.
12. the hearts and minds of somebody the thoughts, emotions, and attitudes a group of people have about a particular subject, which is a combination of their strong emotional feelings and their calm and sensible thoughts:
The president must try to win the hearts and minds of the voters.
13. by heart when you know something by heart, you remember all of it exactly:
After a few days of phoning Stephanie, he knew her number by heart.
Actors have to learn their lines by heart.
14. sb’s heart sinks used to say that someone suddenly lost hope and began to feel unhappy:
Her heart sank when she saw the number of books she had to read.
15. with all your heart with all your strength, energy, or emotion:
He hates Los Angeles with all his heart.
We sang the hymn with all our hearts.
16. take something to heart to consider what someone says to you very seriously, often because it upsets you:
Anne took his criticisms very much to heart.
We took Stephen’s warnings to heart.
17. sb’s heart goes out to somebody used to say that someone feels a lot of sympathy towards another person:
My heart goes out to the families of the victims.
18. CARD GAMES
a) [countable] a heart shape printed in red on a playing card
b) hearts [plural] the suit (=set) of playing cards that have these shapes on them:
the ace of hearts
c) [countable] one of the cards in this set:
Have you got any hearts?
19. do something to your heart’s content to do something as much as you want:
She had lazed around the pool to her heart’s content.
The dog can run to its heart’s content out there.
20. sb’s heart misses/skips a beat used to say that someone suddenly feels a moment of fear or excitement:
His heart missed a beat as he saw the body of a small child at the water’s edge.
21. set your heart on something to want something very much:
His father bought him the bike he had set his heart on.
She had set her heart on becoming a hairdresser.
22. a man/woman etc after my own heart someone who likes the same things or behaves in the same way that you do:
Geoff really is a man after my own heart.
23. cry/sing etc your heart out if you cry, sing etc your heart out, you do it with all your energy or emotion:
He found me crying my heart out and was so kind. ⇨ eat your heart out at eat(4), ⇨ pour your heart out at ↑pour
24. your heart’s desire/everything your heart could desire the one thing you want most, or everything that you could possibly want:
To have a baby was her heart’s desire.
25. not have the heart to do something to be unable to do something because it will make someone unhappy:
I didn’t have the heart to tell her that her beautiful vase was broken.
26. sb’s heart isn’t in it used to say that someone does not really want to do something:
She’s getting bored with the job and her heart’s not in it.
27. do something out of the goodness of your heart to do something out of kindness, not because you have been asked or expect a reward:
All these people were helping us out of the goodness of their hearts.
28. take somebody to your heart if people take someone to their hearts, they like them very much:
The fans have taken Hudson to their hearts.
29. VEGETABLE [countable] the firm middle part of some vegetables:
artichoke hearts
30. give/lose your heart to somebody to start to love someone very much
31. my heart was in my mouth used to say that you suddenly felt very afraid
32. sb’s heart is in the right place informal used to say that someone is really a kind person and has the right feelings about something important:
I don’t think his idea will work, though his heart’s in the right place.
33. it does your heart good to see/hear something used to say that something makes you feel happy
34. sb’s heart leaps literary used to say that someone suddenly feels happy and full of hope:
‘I couldn’t live without you,’ he said and Jane’s heart leapt.
35. be in good heart formal to feel happy and confident:
The team are in good heart and ready for the season’s matches.
36. have a heart! used to tell someone not to be too strict or unkind – used humorously
37. know the way to sb’s heart to know the way to please someone – used humorously
38. my heart bleeds (for somebody) used to say that you do not really feel any sympathy towards someone
a broken heart at broken2(9), ⇨ cross my heart at cross1(11), ⇨ have a change of heart at change2(1), ⇨ sick at heart at sick1(9), ⇨ strike at the heart of something at strike1(7), ⇨ wear your heart on your sleeve at wear1(8), ⇨ win sb’s heart at win1(3)
• • •
COLLOCATIONS (for Meaning 1)
■ verbs
sb’s heart beats Her heart was beating fast.
sb’s heart pounds/thuds/thumps (=it beats very strongly) He reached the top, his heart pounding.
sb’s heart races (=it beats very fast) Was there someone in the alley? Joe’s heart began to race.
■ heart + NOUN
heart trouble/problems You should not take this medication if you have heart problems.
heart disease Smoking increases the risk of heart disease.
a heart condition (=something wrong with your heart) The baby was born with a heart condition.
sb’s heart rate (=the number of times someone’s heart beats per minute) Your heart rate increases as you exercise.
■ adjectives
healthy Eating oily fish can help maintain a healthy heart.
a bad/weak heart (=an unhealthy heart) The effort proved too much for her weak heart.
• • •
COLLOCATIONS (for Meaning 2)
■ adjectives
a good/kind heart (=a kind character) My father had a good heart.
a big heart (=a kind and generous character) She may be only small, but she has a big heart.
a soft heart (=a kind and sympathetic character) Julia’s soft heart had been touched by Minnie’s grief.
a cold/hard heart (=used about someone who does not feel sympathy for other people) It takes a hard heart not to be moved by these images of suffering.
a heavy heart (=feeling very sad) She made her way to the hospital with a heavy heart.
a light heart (=feeling happy) Paul left for home with a light heart.
a broken heart (=feeling very sad because of a problem in love) I wonder how many broken hearts Carlo was responsible for.
■ verbs
break sb’s heart (=make someone feel very sad) It broke my heart to see him so sick.
follow your heart (= do what your emotions want you to do) Go for it. Follow your heart. Who cares what everyone else thinks?
sb’s heart aches (=to feel very sad) It made his heart ache to look at her
■ phrases
heart and soul (=all your feelings) She loved Peter with all her heart and soul.
affairs of the heart (=matters relating to love) I had little experience of affairs of the heart.
sb’s heart rules their head (=someone makes decisions based on emotions rather than careful thought) He has never been one to let his heart rule his head.
a heart of gold (=a very kind character) She was rather brisk in manner but with a heart of gold.
a heart of stone (=a very cruel character) You’d have to have a heart of stone not to feel sorry for them.
be in good heart (=to be happy and confident) The team was in good heart, despite their loss this weekend.
be sick at heart (=to feel very unhappy) He was too sick at heart to know what to say.

 

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

heart

 

heart [heart hearts]   [hɑːt]    [hɑːrt]  noun

PART OF BODY
1. countable the organ in the chest that sends blood around the body, usually on the left in humans
The patient's heart stopped beating for a few seconds.
heart trouble/failure
to have a weak heart
I could feel my heart pounding in my chest (= because of excitement, etc.).

2. countable (literary) the outside part of the chest where the heart is

• She clasped the photo to her heart.  

FEELINGS/EMOTIONS

3. countable the place in a person where the feelings and emotions are thought to be, especially those connected with love
She has a kind heart.
Have you no heart?
He returned with a heavy heart (= sad).
Her novels tend to deal with affairs of the heart.
The story captured the hearts and minds of a generation.

-HEARTED

4. (in adjectives) having the type of character or personality mentioned
• cold-hearted

• kind-hearted  

 

IMPORTANT PART

5. singular ~ (of sth) the most important part of sth
the heart of the matter/problem
The committee's report went to the heart of the government's dilemma.

• The distinction between right and wrong lies at the heart of all questions of morality.  

CENTRE

6. countable, usually singular ~ (of sth) the part that is in the centre of sth

• a quiet hotel in the very heart of the city  

 

OF CABBAGE

7. countable the smaller leaves in the middle of a cabbage, lettuce, etc.  

SHAPE
8. countable a thing shaped like a heart, often red and used as a symbol of love; a symbol shaped like a heart used to mean the verb ‘love’
• The words ‘I love you’ were written inside a big red heart.

(informal) I ♥New York.  

IN CARD GAMES

9. hearts plural, uncountable one of the four sets of cards (called suits) in a pack of cards, with red heart symbols on them
• the queen of hearts

• Hearts is/are trumps.

10. countable one card from the set of hearts
Who played that heart?
more at absence makes the heart grow fonder at  absence, a change of heart at  change  n., cross my heart (and hope to die) at  cross  v., eat your heart out at  eat, be etched on your heart/memory/mind at  etch, what the eye doesn't see (the heart doesn't grieve over) at  eye  n., find it in your heart/yourself to do sth at  find  v., out of the goodness of your heart at  goodness, home is where the heart is at  home  n., have sb's interests at heart at  interest  n., sick at heart at  sick  adj., sob your heart out at  sob  v., steal sb's heart at  steal  v., strike fear, etc. into sb/sb's heart at  strike  v., tear at your hearttear the heart out of sth at  tear1 v., warm the cockles (of sb's heart) at  warm  v., the way to sb's heart at  way  n., wear your heart on your sleeve at  wear  v., win sb's heart at  win  v., young at heart at  young  adj.
Idioms: at heart  break somebody's heart  by heart  dear to somebody's heart  from the heart  give somebody heart  give your heart to somebody  have a heart of gold  have a heart of stone  have a heart!  have your heart set on something  heart and soul  in good heart  in your heart  it does somebody's heart good  let your heart rule your head  lose heart  lose your heart  man after your own heart  my heart bleeds  not have the heart  off by heart  pour out your heart to somebody  rip the heart out of something  set your heart on something  somebody's heart is in the right place  somebody's heart is in their mouth  somebody's heart leaps  somebody's heart misses a beat  somebody's heart sinks  take heart  take something to heart  with all your your whole heart  your heart goes out to somebody  your heart is not in something  your heart's content
See also: off by heart  
Word Origin:
Old English heorte, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch hart and German Herz, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin cor, cord- and Greek kēr, kardia.  
Example Bank:
Finally, he broke down in tears and poured out his heart to her.
He broke her heart.
He committed himself heart and soul to the cause.
He could have a change of heart and settle down to family life.
He had no heart for arguing.
He really puts his heart into his singing.
He set off with a light heart.
He smiled and her heart melted.
Her heart isn't in her job.
Her heart leaped with joy.
Her novels tend to deal with affairs of the heart
Her words pierced my heart.
His sad story touched her heart.
I could tell he spoke from the heart.
I wish you well with all my heart.
In my heart, I knew it wasn't true.
Inside, his heart was slowly breaking.
Just follow your heart and you'll be happy.
Let's sing it one more time from the beginning— and put some heart into it!
My heart aches when I think of their sorrow.
Our hearts go out to= we sympathize deeply with the families of the victims.
Relief filled his heart.
The committee's report went to the heart of the government's dilemma.
The heart pumps blood through the body.
This brings us to the real heart of the matter.
We live in the very heart of the city.
With a heavy heart, she watched him go.
a triple heart bypass operation
everything your heart could desire
open-heart surgery
the issue at the heart of modern government
to win the hearts and minds of the nation's youth
• ‘Hillsdown’ is a quiet hotel in the very heart of the city.

• Cost is at the heart of the matter for the Government.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition
 

heart / hɑːt /   / hɑːrt / noun [ C ] (ORGAN)

heart

A2 the organ in your chest that sends the blood around your body:

He's got a weak/bad heart (= his heart is not healthy) .

Isabel's heart was beating fast with fright.

See picture heart

heart / hɑːt /   / hɑːrt / noun [ C or U ] (EMOTIONS)

B1 used to refer to a person's character, or the place within a person where feelings or emotions are considered to come from:

She has a good heart (= she is a kind person) .

I love you, and I mean it from the bottom of my heart (= very sincerely) .

I love you with all my heart (= very much) .

He said he'd never marry but he had a change of heart (= his feelings changed) when he met her.

Homelessness is a subject very close/dear to her heart (= is very important to her and she has strong feelings about it) .

He broke her heart (= made her very sad) when he left her for another woman.

It breaks my heart (= makes me feel very sad) to see him so unhappy.

They say he died of a broken heart (= because he was so sad) .

old-fashioned It does my heart good (= makes me very happy) to see those children so happy.

His heart leaped (= he suddenly felt very excited and happy) when the phone rang.

heart / hɑːt /   / hɑːrt / noun (CENTRAL PART)

B1 [ S ] the central or most important part:

The demonstrators will march through the heart of the capital.

A disagreement about boundaries is at the heart of the dispute.

Let's get to the heart of the matter .

[ C ] the firm central part of a vegetable, especially one with a lot of leaves:

artichoke hearts

the heart of a lettuce

See picture heart

heart / hɑːt /   / hɑːrt / noun [ U ] (COURAGE)

C2 courage or determination or hope:

You're doing really well - don't lose heart now.

Take heart - things can only get better.

heart / hɑːt /   / hɑːrt / noun [ C ] (SHAPE)

B2 a shape, consisting of two half circles next to each other at the top and a V shape at the bottom, often coloured pink or red and used to represent love

See picture heart

 

heart / hɑːt /   / hɑːrt / noun (CARDS)

hearts [ plural or U ] one of the four suits in playing cards, which has one or more red heart shapes:

the seven/ace of hearts

[ C ] a playing card from the suit of hearts:

In this game, a heart beats a club.

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

heart

[hɑ͟ː(r)t]
 ♦♦
 hearts

 1) N-COUNT Your heart is the organ in your chest that pumps the blood around your body. People also use heart to refer to the area of their chest that is closest to their heart.
  The bullet had passed less than an inch from Andrea's heart...
  The only sound inside was the beating of his heart...
  He gave a sudden cry of pain and put his hand to his heart.
 2) N-COUNT: usu with poss You can refer to someone's heart when you are talking about their deep feelings and beliefs. [LITERARY]
  Alik's words filled her heart with pride...
  I just couldn't bring myself to admit what I knew in my heart to be true.
 3) N-VAR: usu adj N in sing (approval) You use heart when you are talking about someone's character and attitude towards other people, especially when they are kind and generous.
  She loved his brilliance and his generous heart...
  She's got a good heart but she's calculating.
 4) N-SING: the N If you refer to things of the heart, you mean love and relationships.
  This is an excellent time for affairs of the heart.
 5) N-SING: N of n The heart of something is the most central and important part of it.
  The heart of the problem is supply and demand...
  Money lies at the heart of the debate over airline safety.
  Syn:
  crux
 6) N-SING: usu N of n The heart of a place is its centre.
  ...a busy dentists' practice in the heart of London's West End.
 7) N-COUNT: with supp The heart of a lettuce, cabbage, or other vegetable is its centre leaves.
 8) N-COUNT A heart is a shape that is used as a symbol of love: ♥.
  ...heart-shaped chocolates.
 9) N-UNCOUNT-COLL Hearts is one of the four suits in a pack of playing cards. Each card in the suit is marked with one or more symbols in the shape of a heart.
 10) N-COUNT A heart is one of the thirteen playing cards in the suit of hearts.
 11) PHRASE: PHR after v, PHR with cl (emphasis) If you feel or believe something with all your heart, you feel or believe it very strongly.
  My own family I loved with all my heart.
 12) PHRASE: PHR with cl If you say that someone is a particular kind of person at heart, you mean that that is what they are really like, even though they may seem very different.
  He was a very gentle boy at heart.
 13) PHRASE: usu have n PHR If you say that someone has your interests or your welfare at heart, you mean that they are concerned about you and that is why they are doing something.
  She told him she only had his interests at heart.
 14) PHRASE: V and N inflect If someone breaks your heart, they make you very sad and unhappy, usually because they end a love affair or close relationship with you. [LITERARY]
 15) PHRASE: V and N inflect, oft PHR to-inf If something breaks your heart, it makes you feel very sad and depressed, especially because people are suffering but you can do nothing to help them.
  It really breaks my heart to see them this way.
 16) PHRASE: N inflects If you say that someone has a broken heart, you mean that they are very sad, for example because a love affair has ended unhappily. [LITERARY]
  She never recovered from her broken heart.
 17) PHRASE: PHR after v If you know something such as a poem by heart, you have learned it so well that you can remember it without having to read it.
  Mack knew this passage by heart.
 18) PHRASE: change inflects If someone has a change of heart, their attitude towards something changes.
  Several brokers have had a change of heart about prospects for the company...
  Why the change of heart?
 19) PHRASE: N inflects, oft v-link PHR If something such as a subject or project is close to your heart or near to your heart, it is very important to you and you are very interested in it and concerned about it.
  This is a subject very close to my heart.
 20) PHRASE: PHR after v If you can do something to your heart's content, you can do it as much as you want.
  I was delighted to be able to eat my favorite dishes to my heart's content.
 21) CONVENTION You can say `cross my heart' when you want someone to believe that you are telling the truth. You can also ask `cross your heart?', when you are asking someone if they are really telling the truth. [SPOKEN]
  And I won't tell any of the other girls anything you tell me about it. I promise, cross my heart.
 22) PHRASE: PHR after v If you say something from the heart or from the bottom of your heart, you sincerely mean what you say.
  He spoke with confidence, from the heart...
  I don't want to go away without thanking you from the bottom of my heart.
  Syn:
  sincerely
 23) PHRASE: V inflects If something gives you heart, it makes you feel more confident or happy about something.
  It gave me heart to see one thug get what he deserves.
 24) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR to-inf If you want to do something but do not have the heart to do it, you do not do it because you know it will make someone unhappy or disappointed.
  We knew all along but didn't have the heart to tell her.
 25) PHRASE: PHR after v, PHR with cl If you believe or know something in your heart of hearts, that is what you really believe or think, even though it may sometimes seem that you do not.
  I know in my heart of hearts that I am the right man for that mission.
 26) PHRASE: V and N inflect, PHR n/-ing If your heart isn't in the thing you are doing, you have very little enthusiasm for it, usually because you are depressed or are thinking about something else.
  I tried to learn some lines but my heart wasn't really in it.
 27) PHRASE: V inflects If you lose heart, you become sad and depressed and are no longer interested in something, especially because it is not progressing as you would like.
  He appealed to his countrymen not to lose heart.
 28) PHRASE: V and N inflect, oft PHR to n If you lose your heart to someone, you fall in love with them. [LITERARY]
 29) PHRASE: V and Ns inflect If your heart is in your mouth, you feel very excited, worried, or frightened.
  My heart was in my mouth when I walked into her office.
 30) PHRASE: V and N inflect, usu PHR to n If you open your heart or pour out your heart to someone, you tell them your most private thoughts and feelings.
  She opened her heart to millions yesterday and told how she came close to suicide.
 31) PHRASE: heart and V inflect If you say that someone's heart is in the right place, you mean that they are kind, considerate, and generous, although you may disapprove of other aspects of their character.
  He is a bit of a tearaway but his heart is in the right place.
 32) PHRASE: V and N inflect, PHR n/-ing If you have set your heart on something, you want it very much or want to do it very much.
  He had always set his heart on a career in the fine arts.
 33) PHRASE: V and N inflect If you wear your heart on your sleeve, you openly show your feelings or emotions rather than keeping them hidden.
 34) PHRASE (emphasis) If you put your heart and soul into something, you do it with a great deal of enthusiasm and energy.
  He will always be successful when he puts his mind to something, because he puts his heart and soul into it.
 35) PHRASE: V inflects, oft PHR from n If you take heart from something, you are encouraged and made to feel optimistic by it.
 36) PHRASE: V inflects If you take something to heart, for example someone's behaviour, you are deeply affected and upset by it.
  If someone says something critical I take it to heart.

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

heart

heart /ˈhɑɚt/ noun, pl hearts
1 [count] : the organ in your chest that pumps blood through your veins and arteries
• I could feel my heart pounding/racing.
• He has a bad/weak heart.
- often used before another noun
• He suffers from a heart condition.
heart failure/disease/surgery
• a heart murmur
• Aerobic exercise increases your heart rate. [=pulse]
- see picture at human; see also open-heart
2 [count] : the front part of your chest
• He put his hand on his heart.
• (literary) She clutched the child to her heart. [=breast, bosom]
3 a [count] : the heart thought of as the place where emotions are felt
• You shouldn't let your heart rule your head. [=you should be guided by reason and not by your emotions]
• When she heard the news, her heart filled with joy/sorrow.
• You're a man after my own heart. [=we have similar likes and dislikes]
• He offered to help us out of the goodness of his heart. [=because he is a good person and not because he wanted to get anything for himself]
• He wears his heart on his sleeve. [=he shows his emotions very openly]
• She's not too smart, but at least her heart is in the right place. [=she is a kind person who is trying to do good things]
• I just didn't have the heart to tell her that I didn't like her singing. [=I couldn't tell her because I knew that she would be hurt by what I said]
• The idea struck fear into their hearts. [=made them very afraid]
• I decided to follow my heart [=to do what I truly wanted to do] and take up acting.
My heart goes out to [=I feel very sorry for] the families of the victims.
• Her heart's desire [=greatest wish] was to become a movie star.
• She just couldn't find it in her heart to forgive them.
• I felt in my heart that our relationship was never meant to be.
• I think she knows in her heart that they're right. = I think she knows it in her heart of hearts. [=she knows it even though she does not want to admit it]
• They said they'd try to fix the problem, but I could see that their hearts (just) weren't in it. [=they did not really feel much interest or enthusiasm about doing it]
b : a kind or generous feeling for other people

[noncount]

• a ruler without heart

[count]

• a ruler without a heart
• He has a kind heart. [=he treats people kindly]
• He has a cold/hard heart. [=he treats people in a harsh or unfriendly way]
• She has a big heart. = She is all heart. = She has a heart of gold. [=she is a very kind person]
• She has a heart of stone. [=she does not care at all about the feelings of other people]
Have a heart! Can't you see he needs help?

4 [noncount] : feelings of love or affection
• It's best not to interfere in matters/affairs of the heart. [=romantic matters/affairs]
• He was determined to win/steal/capture her heart. [=to win her love]
5 [noncount] : emotional strength that allows you to continue in a difficult situation
• The team has shown a lot of heart.
6 a the heart : the central or most important part of something
• deep in the heart of the forest
• Their offices are in the heart of the city.
• Let's get right to the heart of the matter.
b [count] : the central part of some vegetables
• artichoke hearts
cabbage hearts
7 [count] : a shape that looks like a simple drawing of a heart and that is used as a symbol of love and affection
• The child decorated the card with hearts and flowers.
8 a [count] : a playing card that is marked with a red heart
• one heart, two diamonds, and two clubs
- see picture at human
b hearts [plural] : the suit in a deck of playing cards that consists of cards marked by hearts
• the king of hearts
- compare club, diamond, spade
absence makes the heart grow fonder

at heart
1 : at the most basic level
• I'm really a romantic at heart.
• She's 81 years old, but she's still young at heart. [=she behaves and thinks like a much younger person]
2 : as a main concern
• We have your best interests at heart. [=we want to do what is best for you]
break someone's heart : to cause someone to feel great sorrow or sadness
• He broke her heart when he left her for another woman.
• Her boyfriend left her with a broken heart.
• It breaks my heart to think of how those children have suffered.
by heart : from memory
• She knows the entire poem by heart. [=she has learned the poem and can recite it from memory]
• He learned the speech by heart.
close/dear/near to your heart : very personally and emotionally important to you
• This topic is one that's very close to my heart. [=I care very much about this subject]
• The school is very near and dear to her heart.
cross my heart

cry your heart out

do your heart good : to make you feel very happy
• It does his heart good to know that his daughters have become friends.
eat your heart out

faint of heart

from the bottom of your heart or from the/your heart : in a very sincere way
• He thanked us from the bottom of his heart.
• When I said you were my best friend, I meant it from the bottom of my heart.
• His speech at the memorial service was straight from the heart.
harden your heart

have your heart set on (something) or set your heart on (something)
✦When you have your heart set on something or when you set your heart on something, you want it very much.
• She has her heart set on a new bicycle.
heart in your mouth informal
✦If your heart is in your mouth, you are very excited or nervous about something.
• He waited for her arrival with his heart in his mouth.
heart is knocking

heart skips a beat informal
✦When you say that your heart skipped a beat or that something made your heart skip a beat, it means that you suddenly became very surprised, excited, or nervous about something.
• When I learned I was on live television, my heart skipped a beat.
• The news was enough to make his heart skip a beat.
heavy heart : a feeling of sadness
• It is with a heavy heart that I bring you this bad news.
know your own heart

light heart : a feeling of happiness
• He left for home with a light heart.
lose heart : to begin to feel that you cannot do something that you have been trying to do : to become discouraged
• They never lost heart, even in the face of adversity.
lose your heart : to fall in love with someone
• He met a beautiful woman and lost his heart.
- usually + to
• She lost her heart to a dashing young artist.
open your heart
1 : to talk in a very open and honest way about your feelings
• He opened his heart (to her) and told her how he really felt.
2 : to begin to be generous and kind
• We should all open our hearts and do something to help those poor children.
pour your heart out

sick at heart : very sad and upset
• The idea of children suffering from hunger made him sick at heart.
sing/dance/play (etc.) your heart out : to sing/dance/play (etc.) with great energy or effort
• The band played their hearts out in hopes of winning the prize.
take heart : to begin to feel better and more hopeful : to stop feeling sad or discouraged
Take heart; things will get better soon.
take (something) to heart : to be deeply affected or hurt by something
• He took their criticism (very much) to heart.
to your heart's content : until you feel satisfied : as long or as much as you want
• They let him eat and drink to his heart's content.
• Let's go somewhere where we can talk to our hearts' content.
warm the cockles of your heart

with all your heart : in a very sincere and deeply felt way
• I love him with all my heart.
• She tried with all her heart to please them.
your heart bleeds for
✦If your heart bleeds for someone, you feel great sadness or pity for that person.
your heart leaps
✦When your heart leaps, you become very happy or joyful about something.
Our hearts leapt when we heard that she had won.
your heart melts
✦When your heart melts, you begin to feel love, affection, or sympathy for someone or something.
• When he saw the puppies, his heart melted.
• It would have melted your heart to see her lying in that hospital bed.
• A warm smile melts the heart.
your heart sinks
✦When your heart sinks, you become sad or disappointed about something.
My heart sank when I saw the sad expression on her face.

tomato

tomato [noun]
US /təˈmeɪ.t̬oʊ/ 
UK /təˈmɑː.təʊ/ 
Example: 

What are the benefits of eating raw tomatoes?

a round soft red fruit eaten raw or cooked as a vegetable

tomato - گوجه فرنگی
Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

What are the benefits of eating raw tomatoes?

Oxford Essential Dictionary

tomato

 noun (plural tomatoes)
a soft red fruit that you cook or eat cold in salads:
tomato soup

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

tomato

tomato S2 /təˈmɑːtəʊ $ -ˈmeɪtoʊ/ BrE AmE noun (plural tomatoes) [countable]
[Date: 1600-1700; Language: Spanish; Origin: tomate, from Nahuatl tomatl]

a round soft red fruit eaten raw or cooked as a vegetable

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

tomato

 

to·mato [tomato tomatoes]   [təˈmɑːtəʊ]    [təˈmeɪtoʊ]  noun

countable, uncountable (pl. to·matoes)
a soft fruit with a lot of juice and shiny red skin that is eaten as a vegetable either raw or cooked
a bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwich
sliced tomatoes
tomato plants  
Word Origin:
early 17th cent.: from French, Spanish, or Portuguese tomate, from Nahuatl tomatl.  
Example Bank:

Demonstrators threw rotten tomatoes at the car.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition

tomato     / təmɑ.təʊ /      / -meɪ.t̬oʊ /   noun   [ C  or  U ]   ( plural   tomatoes ) 
  
tomato     A1     a round, red, sharp-tasting fruit with a lot of seeds, eaten cooked or uncooked as a vegetable, for example in salads or sauces 
  
© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

tomato

[təmɑ͟ːtoʊ, AM -me͟ɪ-]
 tomatoes
 N-VAR
 Tomatoes are small, soft, red fruit that you can eat raw in salads or cooked as a vegetable.

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

tomato

tomato/təˈmɑː.təʊ/ US /-ˈmeɪ.ţoʊ/
noun [C or U] plural tomatoes
a round red sharp-tasting fruit with a lot of seeds which is eaten cooked or raw as a savoury food.

rice

rice [noun]
US /raɪs/ 
UK /raɪs/ 
Example: 

We usually eat rice as a main dish.

a food that consists of small white or brown grains that you boil in water until they become soft enough to eat

rice - برنج
Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

We usually eat rice as a main dish.

Oxford Essential Dictionary

rice

 noun (no plural)
short, thin white or brown grain from a plant that grows on wet land in hot countries. We cook and eat rice:
Would you like rice or potatoes with your chicken?

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

rice

rice S3 /raɪs/ BrE AmE noun [uncountable]
[Date: 1200-1300; Language: Old French; Origin: ris, from Greek oryza, oryzon]
1. a food that consists of small white or brown grains that you boil in water until they become soft enough to eat ⇨ risotto, pilau:
a tasty sauce served with rice or pasta
a plate of brown rice
Serve with plain boiled rice.
a few grains of rice
2. the plant that produces rice:
Rice is the main crop grown in the area.
rice fields

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

rice

rice [rice rices riced ricing]   [raɪs]    [raɪs]  noun

uncountable
short, narrow white or brown grain grown on wet land in hot countries as food; the plant that produces this grain
a grain of rice
boiled/steamed/fried rice
long-/short-grain rice
brown rice (= without its outer covering removed)
rice paddies (= rice fields)  
Word Origin:
Middle English: from Old French ris, from Italian riso, from Greek oruza.  
Example Bank:

a spicy rice dish

 

 

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition

rice     / raɪs /   noun   [ U ]   
  
    A1     the small seeds of a particular type of grass, cooked, and eaten as food:  
  boiled/steamed/fried rice 
  long-grain rice 
  Do you prefer brown rice or white rice? 
        a grass that produces these seeds and grows in warm wet places 

 
© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

rice

[ra͟ɪs]
 ♦♦♦
 rices
 N-MASS

 Rice consists of white or brown grains taken from a cereal plant. You cook rice and usually eat it with meat or vegetables.
  ...a meal consisting of chicken, rice and vegetables...
  Thailand exports its fine rices around the world.

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

rice

rice /ˈraɪs/ noun [noncount]
1 : small white or brown grains that come from a southeast Asian plant and that are used for food
• a bowl/grain of rice
• steamed/fried rice
• brown/white rice
2 : the plant that produces rice
Rice is the main crop of the country.
• a field of rice = a rice field/paddy

 

bank

bank [noun] (MONEY)
US /bæŋk/ 
UK /bæŋk/ 
Example: 

He got a large loan from the bank.

A business that keeps and lends money and provides other financial services

bank - بانک
Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

He got a large loan from the bank.

Oxford Essential Dictionary

noun

1 a place that keeps money safe for people:
I've got £500 in the bank.

2 the land along the side of a river:
People were fishing along the banks of the river.

 

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

bank

I. bank1 S1 W1 /bæŋk/ BrE AmE noun [countable]
[Sense 1,3,7: Date: 1400-1500; Language: French; Origin: banque, from Old Italian banca 'long seat, bank']
[Sense 2,4,6,8: Date: 1100-1200; Origin: Probably from a Scandinavian language. ]
[Sense 5: Date: 1200-1300; Language: Old French; Origin: banc 'long seat']
1. PLACE FOR MONEY
a) a business that keeps and lends money and provides other financial services
in the bank
We have very little money in the bank.
Barclays Bank
a bank loan
b) a local office of a bank:
I have to go to the bank at lunch time. ⇨ ↑clearing bank, ↑merchant bank
2. RIVER/LAKE land along the side of a river or lake
bank of
the banks of the River Dee
the river bank
3. blood/sperm/organ bank a place where human blood etc is stored until someone needs it
4. CLOUDS/MIST a large mass of clouds, mist etc:
a fog bank
bank of
banks of mist
5. RAISED AREA a large sloping mass of earth, sand, snow etc:
She was sitting on a grassy bank.
bank of
steep banks of snow
banks of flowers
6. MACHINES a large number of machines, television screens etc arranged close together in a row
bank of
banks of TV monitors
7. GAME a supply of money used to ↑gamble, that people can win ⇨ break the bank at ↑break1(24)
8. be makin' bank American English spoken informal to earn a lot of money for the work that you do:
Check out Omar’s new car. The brother must be makin' bank.
9. ROAD a slope made at a bend in a road or ↑racetrack to make it safer for cars to go around
⇨ ↑bottle bank, ↑food bank, ↑memory bank
• • •
COLLOCATIONS
■ verbs
go to the bank I went to the bank and took out $80.
borrow from a bank You may be able to borrow some money from the bank.
a bank lends something The bank lent me £10,000 to help me start the business.
■ bank + NOUN
a bank account How much do you have in your bank account at the moment?
your bank balance (=the actual amount that you have in your bank account) I'm just going to check my bank balance online.
a bank card You can withdraw money using your bank card.
bank charges Will I have to pay bank charges on this account?
a bank clerk (=a junior worker in a bank) He began his career as a bank clerk.
a bank loan What's the interest rate on your bank loan?
a bank note (=a piece of paper money) a $10 bank note
a bank statement (=a written statement of how much you have in a bank account) I get a written bank statement once a month.
a bank manager Could I make an appointment with the bank manager, please?
a bank robber/robbery The bank robbers were never caught.
■ types of bank
a high street bank (=one of the ordinary banks that most people use) There's a lot of competition between the major high street banks.
a commercial bank (=an ordinary bank, or one that deals with large businesses) the role of UK commercial banks in the debt crisis
an investment/merchant bank (=one that buys and sells stocks and shares etc) Goldman Sachs, the US investment bank
a savings bank (=a bank that accepts your savings and provides mortgages)
a clearing bank (=one of the banks in Britain that uses a clearing house when dealing with other banks) large commercial customers of the clearing banks
a central bank (=the main financial authority in a country) The Bundesbank is the central bank of Germany.
the World Bank (=an international organization providing financial help to developing countries) The road building was funded by the World Bank.

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

bank

bank [bank banks banked banking] noun, verb   [bæŋk]    [bæŋk] 

noun  

FOR MONEY
1. an organization that provides various financial services, for example keeping or lending money
My salary is paid directly into my bank.
I need to go to the bank (= the local office of a bank).
a bank loan
• a bank manager

see also  investment bank, merchant bank  

 

IN GAMBLING

 

2. a supply of money or things that are used as money in some games, especially those in which gambling is involved  

STH COLLECTED/STORED
3. an amount of sth that is collected; a place where sth is stored ready for use
a bank of knowledge
a blood/sperm bank

see also  databank  

 

OF RIVER/CANAL

4. the side of a river, canal, etc. and the land near it
He jumped in and swam to the opposite bank.
• It's on the north bank of the Thames.

• a house on the banks of the River Severn (= on land near the river)  

 

SLOPE

5. a raised area of ground that slopes at the sides, often at the edge of sth or dividing sth
• There were low banks of earth between the rice fields.

• The girls ran down the steep grassy bank.

 

6. an artificial slope built at the side of a road, so that cars can drive fast around bends  

OF CLOUD/SNOW, ETC.
7. a mass of cloud, snow, etc, especially one formed by the wind

• The sun disappeared behind a bank of clouds.  

 

OF MACHINES, ETC.

8. a row or series of similar objects, especially machines
a bank of lights/switches/computers
more at laugh all the way to the bank at  laugh  v.  
Word Origin:
n. senses 4 to 8 and v. senses 3 to 5 Middle English Old Norse bakki Germanic bench ‘set of things in rows’ French banc
n. senses 1 to 3 and v. senses 1 to 2 late 15th cent. French banque Italian banca medieval Latin banca bancus Germanic bank bench
 
Culture:
banks and banking
In Britain, the central bank, which acts as banker for the state and commercial banks, is the Bank of England. The Governor of the Bank of England advises the government on financial matters. The bank sets national interest rates (= the cost of borrowing money) and is responsible for issuing banknotes.
The main commercial banks, called clearing banks or high-street banks, are NatWest, Barclays, Lloyds TSB and HSBC. These are known as the ‘big four’ and have branches in most towns. Former building societies that became banks in the mid 1990s, such as Abbey and the Halifax, now compete with them for customers. People can use a current account and. for savings, a deposit account.The high-street banks offer bank loans for individuals and small businesses. Merchant banks deal with company finance on a larger scale.
In the US there are thousands of banks. This is because banks are prevented by law from operating in more than one state. Some banks get round this rule by forming holding companies which own banks with the same names in different states. Unlike British banks, American banks are banks of deposit and credit and do not build up capital. Banking is dominated by large money center banks, such as Chase, which raise money by dealing in the international money markets and lend it to businesses and other banks.
The US central bank is the Federal Reserve Bank, often called the Fed. In addition to the national Fed in Washington, DC, there are 12 regional ones. The Fed tells commercial banks how much money they must keep in reserve and decides what rate of interest to charge when lending them money. This affects the rate of interest the commercial banks charge their customers.
In the US people keep their accounts in commercial banks which must have a charter (= permission to operate) from the US or a state government. Each state decides whether to allow branch banking, i.e. to allow customers to do business at any branch of a bank, not just the one where they have their account. People also keep money in savings and loans organizations. The most common accounts are checking and savings accounts. 
Collocations:
Finance
Income
earn money/cash/(informal) a fortune
make money/a fortune/(informal) a killing on the stock market
acquire/inherit/amass wealth/a fortune
build up funds/savings
get/receive/leave (sb) an inheritance/a legacy
live on a low wage/a fixed income/a pension
get/receive/draw/collect a pension
depend/be dependent on (BrE) benefits/(NAmE) welfare/social security
Expenditure
spend money/your savings/(informal) a fortune on…
invest/put your savings in…
throw away/waste/ (informal) shell out money on…
lose your money/inheritance/pension
use up/ (informal) wipe out all your savings
pay (in) cash
use/pay by a credit/debit card
pay by/make out a/write sb a/accept a (BrE) cheque/(US) check
change/exchange money/currency (BrE) traveller's cheques/(US) traveler's checks
give/pay/leave (sb) a deposit
Banks
have/hold/open/close/freeze a bank account/an account
credit/debit/pay sth into/take money out of your account
deposit money/funds in your account
withdraw money/cash/£30 from an ATM, etc.
(formal) make a deposit/withdrawal
find/go to/use (especially NAmE) an ATM/(BrE) a cash machine/dispenser
be in credit/in debit/in the black/in the red/overdrawn
Personal finance
manage/handle/plan/run/ (especially BrE) sort out your finances
plan/manage/work out/stick to a budget
offer/extend credit (to sb)
arrange/take out a loan/an overdraft
pay back/repay money/a loan/a debt
pay for sth in (especially BrE) instalments/(NAmE usually) installments
Financial difficulties
get into debt/financial difficulties
be short of/ (informal) be strapped for cash
run out of/owe money
face/get/ (informal) be landed with a bill for £…
can't afford the cost of…/payments/rent
fall behind with/ (especially NAmE) fall behind on the mortgage/repayments/rent
incur/run up/accumulate debts
tackle/reduce/settle your debts 
Example Bank:
A group of ten international banks is to underwrite and sell the bonds.
He got a large loan from the bank.
I need to get some money out of the bank.
I'll put half the money in the bank and spend the rest.
Investors lost millions when the bank crashed.
Many of these banks issue both credit and debit cards.
She has her money in one of the largest savings banks.
The River Frome had burst its banks after torrential rain.
The bank charged him a monthly $5 fee.
The bank lent her money to buy a car.
The bond will be priced by the issuing bank.
The central bank has put up interest rates.
The children rolled down the grassy bank.
The company owes the bank more than €4 million.
The government has refused to bail out the bank.
We could see them waving on the opposite bank.
We strolled along the river bank.
a huge bank of switches and buttons
a picnic on the banks of the Thames
a vast bank of cloud
They intend to establish a bank of information which will be accessible to the public.
a blood/sperm bank
Idiom: not break the bank

Derived: bank on somebody  bank up 

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition
 

bank / bæŋk / noun [ C ] (MONEY)

A1 an organization where people and businesses can invest or borrow money, change it to foreign money, etc., or a building where these services are offered:

High-street banks have been accused of exploiting small firms.

I need to go to the bank at lunch time.

I had to take out a bank loan to start my own business.

In gambling, the bank is money that belongs to the owner and can be won by the players.

bank / bæŋk / noun [ C ] (RIVER)

B2 sloping raised land, especially along the sides of a river:

By the time we reached the opposite bank, the boat was sinking fast.

These flowers generally grow on river banks and near streams.

bank / bæŋk / noun [ C ] (MASS)

a pile or mass of earth, clouds, etc.:

A dark bank of cloud loomed on the horizon.
 

bank / bæŋk / noun [ C ] (ROWS)

a row of similar things, especially machines or parts of machines:

a bank of switches

 

bank / bæŋk / noun [ C ] (STORE)

A bank of something, such as blood or human organs for medical use, is a place that stores these things for later use:

a blood bank

a sperm bank

© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

bank
I. FINANCE AND STORAGE

/bæŋk/

(banks, banking, banked)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1.
A bank is an institution where people or businesses can keep their money.
Which bank offers you the service that best suits your financial needs?...
I had £10,000 in the bank.
N-COUNT
2.
A bank is a building where a bank offers its services.
N-COUNT
3.
If you bank money, you pay it into a bank.
Once you have registered your particulars with an agency and it has banked your cheque, the process begins.
VERB: V n
4.
If you bank with a particular bank, you have an account with that bank.
My husband has banked with the Co-op since before the war.
VERB: V with n
5.
You use bank to refer to a store of something. For example, a blood bank is a store of blood that is kept ready for use.
...Britain’s National Police Computer, one of the largest data banks in the world.
N-COUNT: with supp, usu n N

II. AREAS AND MASSES

/bæŋk/

(banks)
1.
The banks of a river, canal, or lake are the raised areas of ground along its edge.
...30 miles of new developments along both banks of the Thames.
...an old warehouse on the banks of a canal.
= side
N-COUNT: usu N of n
2.
A bank of ground is a raised area of it with a flat top and one or two sloping sides.
...resting indolently upon a grassy bank.
N-COUNT
3.
A bank of something is a long high mass of it.
On their journey south they hit a bank of fog off the north-east coast of Scotland.
N-COUNT: N of n
4.
A bank of things, especially machines, switches, or dials, is a row of them, or a series of rows.
The typical laborer now sits in front of a bank of dials.
N-COUNT
5.
see also banked

III. OTHER VERB USES

/bæŋk/

(banks, banking, banked)
When an aircraft banks, one of its wings rises higher than the other, usually when it is changing direction.
A plane took off and banked above the highway in front of him.
VERB: V

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

bank
5bank noun, pl banks [count] : a group or series of objects that are arranged close together in a row - usually + of
• There is a bank of vending machines in the basement.
• Several banks of lights hung above the stage.
• a bank of file cabinets

- compare 1bank 3bank

3bank noun, pl banks [count]
1 : the higher ground that is along the edge of a river, stream, etc.
• We sat on the bank of the river [=on the riverbank] to watch the boats.
• The stream overflowed its banks.
2 a : a steep slope : the side of a hill
• We planted bushes all along the bank in front of the house.
• They climbed a steep bank to get to the terrace.
- see also sandbank
b : a small hill that is built next to a road along a curve in order to make driving on that section of road safer
3 : a thick mass of clouds or fog
• a fog bank
• A bank of dark clouds entered the region.
- see also snowbank

1bank /ˈbæŋk/ noun, pl banks [count]
1 : a business where people keep their money, borrow money, etc., or the building where such a business operates
• Our paychecks are deposited in/into the bank automatically.
• How much money do you have in the bank?
• My cousin works in/at a bank.
• I have to go to the bank today.
- often used before another noun
bank customers
• How much money do you have in your bank account?
- see also savings bank
2 : a small closed container in which money is saved
• She saves all her change in a small bank on her desk.
- see also piggy bank
3 : a place where a particular thing is stored until it is needed
• information stored in a computer's memory banks
- see also blood bank, sperm bank
break the bank : to be very expensive or too expensive : to cost a lot of money - usually used in negative statements
• Buy a car that's dependable but won't break the bank.
laugh all the way to the bank

swim

US /swɪm/ 
UK /swɪm/ 
Example: 

They spent the day swimming and sunbathing.

To move yourself through water using your arms and legs

swim - شنا کردن
Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

They spent the day swimming and sunbathing.

Oxford Essential Dictionary

swim

 verb (swims, swimming, swam /, has swum )
to move your body through water:
Can you swim?
I swam across the lake.

grammar
When you talk about spending time swimming as a sport, you usually say go swimming: I go swimming every day.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

swim

I. swim1 S3 /swɪm/ BrE AmE verb (past tense swam /swæm/, past participle swum /swʌm/, present participle swimming)
[Word Family: noun: ↑swim, ↑swimmer, ↑swimming; verb: ↑swim; adverb: ↑swimmingly]
[Language: Old English; Origin: swimman]
1. MOVE THROUGH WATER [intransitive and transitive] to move yourself through water using your arms and legs
swim in
We swam in the chilly water.
swim around/across etc
She could swim across the lake.
Let’s go swimming this afternoon.
kids learning to swim the backstroke
She was the first woman to swim the Channel.
2. WATER ANIMALS [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] when fish, ducks etc swim, they move around the water using their tails and ↑fins, their feet etc:
Tropical fish swam slowly around in the tank.
3. NOT THINKING/SEEING PROPERLY [intransitive]
a) if your head swims, you start to feel confused or that everything is spinning around:
My head was swimming after looking at that screen all day.
b) if something you are looking at swims, it seems to be moving around, usually because you are ill, tired, or drunk:
The numbers swam before my eyes.
4. be swimming in something to be covered by a lot of liquid:
potatoes swimming in thick gravy
5. swim against the tide/current etc to do or say things which are different from what most people do or say, because you do not mind being different OPP swim with the tide
sink or swim at ↑sink1(15)

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

swim

swim [swim swims swam swimming swum] verb, noun   [swɪm]    [swɪm] 

 

verb (swim·ming, swam   [swæm]  ;   [swæm]  swum   [swʌm]  ;   [swʌm]  )
1. intransitive, transitive (of a person) to move through water in a horizontal position using the arms and legs
I can't swim.
The boys swam across the lake.
We swam out (= away from land) to the yacht.
They spent the day swimming and sunbathing.
~ sth Can you swim backstroke yet?

How long will it take her to swim the Channel?

2. intransitive go swimming to spend time swimming for pleasure

I go swimming twice a week.

3. intransitive (+ adv./prep.) (of a fish, etc.) to move through or across water
A shoal of fish swam past.

Ducks were swimming around on the river.

4. intransitive (usually be swimming) to be covered with a lot of liquid
~ (in sth) The main course was swimming in oil.

~ (with sth) Her eyes were swimming with tears.

5. intransitive (of objects, etc.) to seem to be moving around, especially when you are ill/sick or drunk

The pages swam before her eyes.

6. intransitive to feel confused and/or as if everything is spinning around
His head swam and he swayed dizzily.
see sink or swim at  sink  v.
Verb forms:

 
Word Origin:
Old English swimman (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zwemmen and German schwimmen.  
Which Word?:
bath / bathe / swim / sunbathe
When you wash yourself you can say that you bath (BrE) or bathe (NAmE), but it is much more common to say have a bath (BrE) or take a bath (NAmE).
You can also bath (BrE) or bathe (NAmE) another person, for example a baby.
You bathe a part of your body, especially to clean a wound.
When you go swimming it is old-fashioned to say that you bathe, and you cannot say that you bath or take a bath. It is more common to swim, go for a swim, have a swim or go swimming: Let’s go for a quick swim in the pool. She goes swimming every morning before breakfast. What you wear for this activity is usually called a swimming costume in BrE and a bathing suit in NAmE.
When you lie in the sun in order to go brown you sunbathe. 
Example Bank:
A beaver swam vigorously upstream.
A water vole swam vigorously upstream.
Exhausted, they swam ashore.
He can't swim well.
She swam back towards the shore.
We swam out to the boat.
swimming across the river
swimming in the sea
to swim across the river
to swim in the sea

Idiom: in the swim 

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition

swim     / swɪm /   verb   ( present participle   swimming ,  past tense   swam ,  past participle   swum )   (MOVE IN WATER) 
  
swim     A1   [ I  or  T ]   to move through water by moving the body or parts of the body:  
  We spent the day on the beach but it was too cold to  go  swimming. 
  Her ambition is to swim  (across)  the English Channel. 
  I swam two miles this morning. 
  be swimming in/with  sth   disapproving 
        If food is swimming in/with a liquid, it has too much of that liquid in it or on it:  
  The salad was swimming in oil. 

swim     / swɪm /   verb   ( present participle   swimming ,  past tense   swam ,  past participle   swum )   (SEEM TO MOVE) 
  
      [ I ]   (of an object) to seem to move about:  
  Getting up too suddenly made the room swim before her eyes. 
      [ I ]   If your head swims, you feel confused and are unable to think or see clearly:  
  After the second or third drink, my  head  began to swim. 

 
© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

swim

/swɪm/
(swims, swimming, swam, swum)

Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.

1.
When you swim, you move through water by making movements with your arms and legs.
She learned to swim when she was really tiny...
I went round to Jonathan’s to see if he wanted to go swimming...
He was rescued only when an exhausted friend swam ashore...
I swim a mile a day.
VERB: V, V, V adv/prep, V amount/n

2.
If you swim a race, you take part in a swimming race.
She swam the 400 metres medley ten seconds slower than she did in 1980.
VERB: V n

3.
If you swim a stretch of water, you keep swimming until you have crossed it.
In 1875, Captain Matthew Webb became the first man to swim the English Channel.
VERB: V n

4.
When a fish swims, it moves through water by moving its body.
The barriers are lethal to fish trying to swim upstream.
VERB: V adv/prep, also V

5.
If objects swim, they seem to be moving backwards and forwards, usually because you are ill.
Alexis suddenly could take no more: he felt too hot, he couldn’t breathe, the room swam.
VERB: V

6.
If your head is swimming, you feel unsteady and slightly ill.
The musty aroma of incense made her head swim.
= spin
VERB: V

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

1swim /ˈswɪm/ verb swims; swam /ˈswæm/; swum /ˈswʌm/; swim·ming
1 a [no obj] : to move through water by moving your arms and legs
• He's teaching the children to swim.
• She swam across the pool.
• I can't swim.
• He swam (for) almost a mile.
- see also swimming
b [+ obj] : to move through or across (an area of water) by swimming
• He swam the English Channel.
c [+ obj] : to swim by using (a specified method)
• The racers must swim the backstroke.
d [no obj] of a fish, bird, etc. : to move through or over water
• We watched the fish swimming in the river.
• Ducks swam in/on the pond.
2 [no obj] : to be completely covered with a liquid - usually used as (be) swimming in
• The potatoes were swimming in butter/gravy.
3 [no obj]
a : to feel dizzy or unable to think clearly because you are sick, confused, etc.
• I felt weak and my head was swimming.
• All the facts and figures he was reciting were starting to make my head swim. [=starting to make me feel confused, unable to think clearly, etc.]
b of something you are looking at : to seem to be moving around because you are tired, sick, etc.
• The room swam before my eyes.
sink or swim

swim with/against the tide

sing

US /sɪŋ/ 
UK /sɪŋ/ 
Example: 

The birds were singing outside my window.

To produce a musical sound with your voice

sing - آواز خواندن
Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

The birds were singing outside my window

Oxford Essential Dictionary

sing

 verb (sings, singing, sang /, has sung )
to make music with your voice:
She sang a song.
The birds were singing.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

sing

sing S1 W2 /sɪŋ/ BrE AmE verb (past tense sang /sæŋ/, past participle sung /sʌŋ/)
[Word Family: noun: ↑singer, ↑singing; verb: ↑sing; adjective: ↑unsung]
[Language: Old English; Origin: singan]
1. WITH YOUR VOICE [intransitive and transitive] to produce a musical sound with your voice:
She can sing beautifully.
Most children enjoy singing.
We had a great time singing some of the old songs.
sing to
My mother used to sing to me when I was young.
He was singing to himself quietly.
sing somebody something
Come on, sing us a song!
I’ve never been able to sing in tune (=sing the correct notes).
She patiently sang the baby to sleep. ⇨ ↑singing
2. BIRDS [intransitive] if birds sing, they produce high musical sounds:
I could hear the birds singing outside my window.
3. HIGH NOISE [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] to make a high whistling sound:
A kettle was singing on the stove.
sing past
A bullet sang past my ear.
4. sing sb’s praises to praise someone very much:
Mrs Edwards was singing your praises today.
5. sing a different tune to say something different from what you said before:
You’re singing a different tune now!
6. be singing from the same hymn sheet/book used to say that a group of people all have the same aims or all express the same opinion on a particular subject:
Union representatives are all singing from the same hymn sheet on the issue of pay.
7. GIVE INFORMATION [intransitive] informal to tell people everything you know about a crime when they ask you questions about it – used especially by criminals and the police:
I think he’ll sing.
sing along phrasal verb
to sing with someone else who is already singing:
Sing along if you know the words.
sing along to
Jess was singing along to the radio.
sing out phrasal verb
1. sing out (something) to shout or sing some words clearly and loudly:
‘Freeze!’ a shrill voice sang out.
2. American English to sing loudly so that people can hear you easily
sing up phrasal verb British English
to sing more loudly:
Sing up, boys, I can’t hear you!

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

sing

I. sing [sing sings sang singing sung]   [sɪŋ]    [sɪŋ]  verb (sang   [sæŋ]  ;   [sæŋ]  , sung   [sʌŋ]  ;   [sʌŋ]  )
1. intransitive, transitive to make musical sounds with your voice in the form of a song or tune
She usually sings in the shower.
I just can't sing in tune!
He was dancing around and singing at the top of his voice (= very loudly).
~ to sb He was singing softly to the baby.
~ sth to sb We all sang ‘Happy Birthday’ to her.
Will you sing a song to us?
~ sb sth Will you sing us a song?
~ sth Now I'd like to sing a song by the Beatles.

~ sb to sleep She sang the baby to sleep (= sang until the baby went to sleep).

2. intransitive (of birds) to make high musical sounds

• The birds were singing outside my window.

3. intransitive (+ adv./prep.) to make a high ringing sound like a whistle
Bullets sang past my ears.
She felt faint and the blood was singing in her head.
The kettle was singing away on the stove.
more at it's not over until the fat lady sings at  fat  adj.
Idioms: sing a different tune  sing from the same hymn sheet
Derived: sing along  sing of something  sing out  sing up
See also: sing out
 
Word Origin:
Old English singan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zingen and German singen.  
Thesaurus:
sing verb I, T
Sing us a song.
chanthumwhistle
sing/chant/whistle at sb/sth
sing/whistle to sb/sth
sing/hum/whistle a song/tune  
Collocations:
Music
Listening
listen to/enjoy/love/be into music/classical music/jazz/pop/hip-hop, etc.
listen to the radio/an MP3 player/a CD
put on/play a CD/a song/some music
turn down/up the music/radio/volume/bass
go to a concert/festival/gig/performance/recital
copy/burn/rip music/a CD/a DVD
download music/an album/a song/a demo/a video
Playing
play a musical instrument/the piano/percussion/a note/a riff/the melody/a concerto/a duet/by ear
sing an anthem/a ballad/a solo/an aria/the blues/in a choir/soprano/alto/tenor/bass/out of tune
hum a tune/a theme tune/a lullaby
accompany a singer/choir
strum a chord/guitar
Performing
form/start/get together/join/quit/leave a band
give a performance/concert/recital
do a concert/recital/gig
play a concert/gig/festival/venue
perform (BrE) at/in a concert/(especially NAmE) a concert
appear at a festival/live
go on/embark on a (world) tour
Recording
write/compose music/a ballad/a melody/a tune/a song/a theme song/an opera/a symphony
land/get/sign a record deal
be signed to/be dropped by a record company
record/release/put out an album/a single/a CD
be top of/top the charts
get to/go straight to/go straight in at/enter the charts at number one 
Example Bank:
Have you ever heard the band sing live?
He was singing quietly to himself.
Her mother sang her to sleep.
I can't sing very well.
Shall I sing to you?
She could sing a bit and agreed to take part in the show.
The birds sang louder than ever.
The lyrics were sung to the tune of the Beatles' ‘Eleanor Rigby’.
Unfortunately, he was singing out of tune.
We played and sang together.
boy bands singing about love
He was dancing around and singing at the top of his voice.
I just can't sing in tune!
• Now I'd like to sing a song by the Beatles.

• She sang the baby to sleep.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition

sing     / sɪŋ /   verb   [ I  or  T ]   ( sang ,  sung )   (MAKE MUSIC) 
  
    A1     to make musical sounds with the voice, usually a tune with words:  
  The children sang two songs by Schubert at the school concert. 
  We were woken early by the sound of the birds singing. 
  Your grandmother would like you to sing  for/to  her. 
  [ + two objects ]   Will you sing us a song/sing a song  to  us? 
  She sang her baby  to sleep  every night. 
  Pavarotti is singing Rodolfo   (= singing the part of Rodolfo)  in "La Bohème" at La Scala this week. 
  Please sing  up  ( US   out )   (= sing louder) . 
  
singing     / sɪŋ.ɪŋ /   noun   [ U ]   
 
© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

sing

/sɪŋ/
(sings, singing, sang, sung)

Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.

1.
When you sing, you make musical sounds with your voice, usually producing words that fit a tune.
I can’t sing...
I sing about love most of the time...
They were all singing the same song...
Go on, then, sing us a song!...
‘You’re getting to be a habit with me,’ sang Eddie.
VERB: V, V about n, V n, V n n, V with quote

2.
When birds or insects sing, they make pleasant high-pitched sounds.
Birds were already singing in the garden.
VERB: V

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

sing

sing /ˈsɪŋ/ verb sings; sang /ˈsæŋ/ or sung /ˈsʌŋ/; sung; sing·ing
1 : to use your voice to make musical sounds in the form of a song or tune

[no obj]
• She sings in the choir.
• The children danced and sang.
• She sings beautifully.
• He sang softly to the baby.
• She's a great actress, and she can dance and sing, too.

[+ obj]

• We all stood and sang the national anthem.
• He sang a tune to us. = He sang us a tune.
• I can't sing the high notes.
• She sang the baby to sleep. [=she sang to the baby until it fell asleep]
2 [no obj] : to make pleasant sounds that sound like music
• Do you hear the birds singing?
3 [no obj] : to make a high-pitched whistling sound
• The kettle sang on the stove.
• The bullet sang past his helmet.
sing a different tune
- see 1tune
sing along [phrasal verb] : to sing a song together with someone who is already singing or with a recording of the song
• If you know the words, sing along (with us).
• He loves to sing along with the radio.
- see also sing-along
sing of [phrasal verb] sing of (someone or something) literary + old-fashioned : to speak or write about (someone or something) especially with enthusiasm
• The poet sang of knights and medieval times.
sing out [phrasal verb] sing out or sing out (something) or sing (something) out
1 : to say or shout something loudly
• If you need any help, just sing out.
• The children sang out [=cried out] “good morning” to the teacher.
• The crowd sang out insults.
2 : to sing something loudly
• The singer stopped and the crowd sang out the rest of the chorus.
sing someone's/something's praises or sing the praises of someone/something : to say good things about someone or something
• His patients all sing his praises.
• They were singing the praises of their new equipment.
- singing noun [noncount]
• What beautiful singing.
• folk singing
• There was singing and dancing all night long.
- singing adj
• She has a wonderful singing voice.
• His singing career is ruined.

guitar

guitar (noun)
US /ɡɪˈtɑːr/ 
UK /ɡɪˈtɑːr/ 
Example: 

Do you want to learn how to play guitar?

A musical instrument usually with six strings that you play by pulling the strings with your fingers or with a ↑plectrum (=small piece of plastic, metal etc)

Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

Do you want to learn how to play guitar?

Oxford Essential Dictionary

guitar

 noun
a musical instrument with strings:
I play the guitar in a band.

>> guitarist noun a person who plays the guitar

 

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

guitar

guitar S3 W3 /ɡɪˈtɑː $ -ˈtɑːr/ BrE AmE noun [countable]
[Date: 1600-1700; Language: French; Origin: guitare, from Spanish guitarra, from Arabic qitar, from Greek kithara type of stringed instrument]
a musical instrument usually with six strings that you play by pulling the strings with your fingers or with a ↑plectrum (=small piece of plastic, metal etc)
an acoustic/an electric/a classical guitar ⇨ ↑bass guitar, ↑steel guitar

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

guitar

gui·tar [guitar guitars]   [ɡɪˈtɑː(r)]    [ɡɪˈtɑːr]  noun

a musical instrument that usually has six strings, that you play with your fingers or with a plectrum
an acoustic/an electric/a classical, etc. guitar
a guitar player
Do you play the guitar?
She plays guitar in a band.
As he sang, he strummed his guitar.
see also  air guitar, bass  
Word Origin:
early 17th cent.: from Spanish guitarra (partly via French), from Greek kithara, denoting an instrument similar to the lyre.  
Example Bank:
• He gently plucked his guitar.

• He would stand in front of the mirror, playing air guitar to Van Halen songs.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

guitar

guitar /gɪˈtɑːʳ/ US /-ˈtɑːr/
noun [C]
a musical instrument with six strings and a long neck which is usually made of wood, and which is played by pulling or hitting the strings with the fingers:
He sat on the grass, strumming his guitar.
an acoustic guitar
an electric guitar

guitarist /gɪˈtɑː.rɪst/ US /-ˈtɑːr.ɪst/
noun [C]
a person who plays the guitar:
a classical/folk/rock guitarist

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

guitar

/gɪtɑ:(r)/
(guitars)

Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.

A guitar is a musical instrument with six strings and a long neck. You play the guitar by plucking or strumming the strings.

N-VAR: oft the N

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

guitar

gui·tar /gɪˈtɑɚ/ noun, pl -tars [count] : a musical instrument that is held against the front of your body and that has usually six strings which are played with your fingers or with a pick
• an acoustic/electric guitar
• I'm learning to play the guitar. = (US) I'm learning to play guitar.
• a guitar player
- see picture at stringed instrument
- gui·tar·ist /gɪˈtɑrɪst/ noun, pl -ists [count]
• She's a very talented guitarist.

play

US /pleɪ/ 
UK /pleɪ/ 
Example: 

Do you want to learn how to play guitar?

To perform a piece of music on a musical instrument

Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

Do you want to learn how to play guitar?

Oxford Essential Dictionary

verb (plays, playing, played )

1 to have fun; to do something to enjoy yourself:
The children were playing with their toys.

2 to take part in a game:
I like playing tennis.
Do you know how to play chess?

3 to make music with a musical instrument:
My sister plays the piano very well.

grammar
Note that we usually say 'play the violin, the piano, etc.': I'm learning to play the clarinet.

4 to put a record, CD, DVD, etc. in a machine and listen to it:
Shall I play the CD again?

5 to act the part of somebody in a play:
Who wants to play the policeman?

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

play

I. play1 S1 W1 /pleɪ/ BrE AmE verb
[Word Family: noun: ↑play, ↑interplay, ↑replay, ↑player, ↑playfulness; verb: ↑play, ↑outplay, ↑replay; adjective: ↑playful, ↑playable; adverb: ↑playfully]
[Language: Old English; Origin: plegan]
1. CHILDREN [intransitive and transitive] when children play, they do things that they enjoy, often with other people or with toys:
Kids were playing and chasing each other.
play catch/house/tag/school etc
Outside, the children were playing cowboys and Indians.
play with
Did you like to play with dolls when you were little?
Parents need to spend time just playing with their children.
2. SPORTS/GAMES
a) [intransitive and transitive] to take part or compete in a game or sport:
Karen began playing basketball when she was six.
If you feel any pain, you shouldn’t play.
Men were sitting in the park, playing cards.
play against
Bristol will play against Coventry next week.
She’s playing Helen Evans in the semi-final (=playing against her).
play for
Moxon played for England in ten test matches.
b) [transitive] to use a particular piece, card, person etc in a game or sport:
Harrison played a ten of spades.
The Regents played Eddie at center (=used him as a player in that position) in the game against Arizona.
c) [intransitive and transitive] to take a particular position on a team:
Garvey played first base for the Dodgers.
d) [transitive] to hit a ball in a particular way or to a particular place in a game or sport:
She played the ball low, just over the net.

MUSIC [intransitive and transitive]
to perform a piece of music on a musical instrument:
He’s learning to play the piano.
She played a Bach prelude.
Haden has played with many jazz greats.
A small orchestra was playing.
4. RADIO/CD ETC [intransitive and transitive] if a radio, CD etc plays, or if you play it, it produces sound, especially music:
The bedside radio played softly.
play a record/CD/tape etc
DJs playing the latest house and techno tracks
5. THEATRE/FILM
a) [transitive] to perform the actions and say the words of a particular character in a theatre performance, film etc:
Streep plays a shy, nervous woman.
play a role/part/character etc
Playing a character so different from herself was a challenge.
b) [intransitive] if a play or film is playing at a particular theatre, it is being performed or shown there:
‘Macbeth’ is playing at the Theatre Royal in York.
c) [transitive] if actors play a theatre, they perform there in a play
6. play a part/role to have an effect or influence on something
play a part/role in
A good diet and fitness play a large part in helping people live longer.
7. play ball
a) to throw, kick, hit, or catch a ball as a game or activity:
Jim and Karl were playing ball in the backyard.
b) to do what someone wants you to do:
So far, the company has refused to play ball, preferring to remain independent.
8. PRETEND [linking verb] to behave as if you are a particular kind of person or have a particular feeling or quality, even though it is not true:
the accusation that scientists are playing God
Some snakes fool predators by playing dead.
‘What do you mean?’ ‘Don’t play dumb (=pretend you do not know something).'
Don’t play the innocent (=pretend you do not know about something) with me – we both know what happened.
play the idiot/the teacher etc
Susan felt she had to play the good wife.
He played the fool (=behaved in a silly way) at school instead of working.
9. BEHAVE [transitive always + adverb/preposition] to behave in a particular way in a situation, in order to achieve the result or effect that you want:
How do you want to play this meeting?
Play it safe (=avoid risks) and make sure the eggs are thoroughly cooked.
play it carefully/cool etc
If you like him, play it cool, or you might scare him off.
10. play games to hide your real feelings or wishes in order to achieve something in a clever or secret way – used to show disapproval:
Stop playing games, Luke, and tell me what you want.
11. play something by ear
a) to decide what to do according to the way a situation develops, without making plans before that time:
We’ll see what the weather’s like and play it by ear.
b) if someone can play a musical instrument by ear, they can play a tune without looking at written music
12. play a joke/trick/prank on somebody to do something to someone as a joke or trick
13. play the game
a) to do things in the way you are expected to do them or in a way that is usual in a particular situation:
If you want a promotion, you’ve got to play the game.
b) British English to behave in a fair and honest way
14. play the race/nationalist/environmentalist etc card to use a particular subject in politics in order to gain an advantage:
a leader who is skilfully playing the nationalist card to keep power
15. play your cards right to say or do things in a situation in such a way that you gain as much as possible from it:
Who knows? If you play your cards right, maybe he’ll marry you.
16. play your cards close to your chest to keep secret what you are doing in a situation
17. play into sb’s hands to do what someone you are competing with wants you to do, without realizing it:
If we respond with violence, we’ll be playing into their hands, giving them an excuse for a fight.
18. play for time to try to delay something so that you have more time to prepare for it or prevent it from happening:
The rebels may be playing for time while they try to get more weapons.
19. play tricks (on you) if your mind, memory, sight etc plays tricks on you, you feel confused and not sure about what is happening:
It happened a long time ago, and my memory might be playing tricks on me.
20. play the market to risk money on the ↑stock market as a way of trying to earn more money
21. play the system to use the rules of a system in a clever way, to gain advantage for yourself:
Accountants know how to play the tax system.
22. play second fiddle (to somebody) to be in a lower position or rank than someone else
23. play hard to get to pretend that you are not sexually interested in someone so that they will become more interested in you
24. SMILE [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] written if a smile plays about someone’s lips, they smile slightly
25. play hooky American English, play truant British English to stay away from school without permission
26. play with fire to do something that could have a very dangerous or harmful result:
Dating the boss’s daughter is playing with fire.
27. play to your strengths to do what you are able to do well, rather than trying to do other things:
It is up to us to play to our strengths and try to control the game.
28. LIGHT [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] written if light plays on something, it shines on it and moves on it:
the sunlight playing on the water
29. WATER [intransitive] written if a ↑fountain plays, water comes from it
30. play a hose/light on something to point a ↑hose or light towards something so that water or light goes onto it
31. play the field to have sexual relationships with a lot of different people
32. play fast and loose with something to not be careful about what you do, especially by not obeying the law or a rule:
They played fast and loose with investors’ money.
33. play happy families British English to spend time with your family, doing normal things, especially so that your family appears to be happy when it is not
play around (also play about British English) phrasal verb
1. to have a sexual relationship with someone who is not your usual partner
play around with
Wasn’t she playing around with another man?
It was years before I realized he’d been playing around.
2. to try doing something in different ways, to see what would be best, especially when this is fun
play around with
Play around with the ingredients if you like.
3. to behave in a silly way or waste time, when you should be doing something more serious SYN fool around:
When the teacher wasn’t looking, we used to play about a lot.
play around with something (also play about with something British English) phrasal verb
to keep moving or making changes to something in your hands SYN fiddle with:
Will you stop playing around with the remote control!
play along phrasal verb
1. to pretend to agree to do what someone wants, in order to avoid annoying them or to get an advantage:
She felt she had to play along or risk losing her job.
2. play somebody along British English to tell someone something that is not true because you need their help in some way
play at something phrasal verb
1. What is somebody playing at? British English spoken used when you do not understand what someone is doing or why they are doing it, and you are surprised or annoyed:
What do you think you’re playing at?
2. if you play at doing something, you do not do it properly or seriously
play at doing something
He’s still playing at being an artist.
3. British English if children play at doctors, soldiers etc, they pretend to be doctors, soldiers etc
play at being something
a 14-year-old playing at being a grown woman
play something ↔ back phrasal verb
to play something that has been recorded on a machine so that you can listen to it or watch it:
He played back his answering machine messages.
play something ↔ down phrasal verb
to try to make something seem less important or less likely than it really is:
Management has been playing down the possibility of job losses.
play down the importance/seriousness/significance of something
The White House spokeswoman sought to play down the significance of the event.
play off phrasal verb
1. British English if people or teams play off, they play the last game in a sports competition, in order to decide who is the winner:
The top two teams will play off at Twickenham for the county title.
2. play off somebody/something American English to deliberately use a fact, action, idea etc in order to make what you are doing better or to get an advantage:
The two musicians played off each other in a piece of inspired improvisation.
play somebody off against somebody phrasal verb
to encourage one person or group to compete or argue with another, in order to get some advantage for yourself:
The house seller may try to play one buyer off against another, to raise the price.
play on/upon something phrasal verb
to use a feeling, fact, or idea in order to get what you want, often in an unfair way:
The ad plays on our emotions, showing a doctor holding a newborn baby.
play something ↔ out phrasal verb
1. if an event or situation is played out or plays itself out, it happens:
It will be interesting to see how the election plays itself out.
2. if people play out their dreams, feelings etc, they express them by pretending that a particular situation is really happening:
The weekend gives you a chance to play out your fantasies.
play up phrasal verb
1. play something ↔ up to emphasize something, sometimes making it seem more important than it really is:
Play up your strongest arguments in the opening paragraph.
2. play (somebody) up British English informal if children play up, they behave badly:
Jordan’s been playing up in school.
I hope the kids don’t play you up.
3. play (somebody) up British English informal to hurt you or cause problems for you:
My knee’s been playing me up this week.
The car’s playing up again.
play up to somebody phrasal verb
to behave in a very polite or kind way to someone because you want something from them:
Connie always plays up to her parents when she wants money.
play with somebody/something phrasal verb
1. to keep touching something or moving it:
Stop playing with the light switch!
2. to try doing something in different ways to decide what works best:
Play with the design onscreen, moving text and pictures until you get a pleasing arrangement.
3. to consider an idea or possibility, but not always very seriously SYN toy with:
After university, I played with the idea of teaching English in China.
4. money/time/space etc to play with money, time etc that is available to be used:
The budget is very tight, so there isn’t much money to play with.
5. play with yourself to touch your own sex organs for pleasure SYN masturbate
6. play with words/language to use words in a clever or amusing way

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

play

play [play plays played playing] verb, noun   [pleɪ]    [pleɪ] 

verb  

 

OF CHILDREN
1. intransitive, transitive to do things for pleasure, as children do; to enjoy yourself, rather than work
• You'll have to play inside today.
• There's a time to work and a time to play.
~ with sb/sth A group of kids were playing with a ball in the street.
• I haven't got anybody to play with!

~ sth Let's play a different game.

2. transitive, no passive, intransitive to pretend to be or do sth for fun
~ sth Let's play pirates.

~ at doing sth They were playing at being cowboys.  

TRICK

 

3. transitive ~ a trick/tricks (on sb) to trick sb for fun  

SPORTS/GAMES
4. transitive, intransitive ~ (sth) (with/against sb) to be involved in a game; to compete against sb in a game
~ sth to play football/chess/cards, etc.
~ sb France are playing Wales tomorrow.
~ sb at sth Have you played her at squash yet?
~ for sb He plays for Cleveland.
~ against sb France are playing against Wales on Saturday.

+ adv./prep. Evans played very well.

5. intransitive to take a particular position in a sports team
+ adv./prep. Who's playing on the wing?

+ noun I've never played right back before.

6. transitive ~ sb (+ adv./prep.) to include sb in a sports team

• I think we should play Matt on the wing.

7. transitive ~ sth to make contact with the ball and hit or kick it in the way mentioned
• She played the ball and ran forward.

• He played a backhand volley.

8. transitive ~ sth (in chess) to move a piece in chess, etc

• She played her bishop.

9. transitive, intransitive ~ (sth) (in card games) to put a card face upwards on the table, showing its value
• to play your ace/a trump

• He played out of turn!  

 

MUSIC

10. transitive, intransitive ~ (sth) (on sth) to perform on a musical instrument; to perform music
~ (sth) to play the piano/violin/flute, etc.
• In the distance a band was playing.
~ sth (on sth) He played a tune on his harmonica.
~ sth to sb Play that new piece to us.

~ sb sth Play us that new piece.

11. transitive, intransitive to make a tape, CD, etc. produce sound
~ sth (for sb) Play their new CD for me, please.
~ (sb sth) Play me their new CD, please.
• My favourite song was playing on the radio.

• For some reason this CD won't play.  

 

DVD/VIDEO

12. intransitive, transitive (of a DVD or video) to start working; to make a DVD or video start working
• This DVD won't play on my computer.
~ sth Click below to play videos.
• Nothing happens when I try to play a DVD.

• A short video was played to the court showing the inside of the house.  

 

ACT/PERFORM

13. transitive ~ sth to act in a play, film/movie, etc; to act the role of sb
• The part of Elizabeth was played by Cate Blanchett.

• He had always wanted to play Othello.

14. intransitive to pretend to be sth that you are not
+ adj. I decided it was safer to play dead.

+ noun She enjoys playing the wronged wife.

15. intransitive ~ (to sb) to be performed

• A production of ‘Carmen’ was playing to packed houses.  

 

HAVE EFFECT

16. transitive ~ a part/role (in sth) to have an effect on sth

• The media played an important part in the last election.  

 

SITUATION

17. transitive ~ sth + adv./prep. to deal with a situation in the way mentioned

• He played the situation carefully for maximum advantage.  

 

OF LIGHT/A SMILE

18. intransitive + adv./prep. to move or appear quickly and lightly, often changing direction or shape

• Sunlight played on the surface of the lake.  

 

OF FOUNTAIN

19. intransitive when a fountain plays, it produces a steady stream of water

• Two huge fountains were playing outside the entrance.

Rem: Most idioms containing play are at the entries for the nouns and adjectives in the idioms, for example play the game is at game.
 
Word Origin:

Old English pleg(i)an ‘to exercise’, plega ‘brisk movement’, related to Middle Dutch pleien ‘leap for joy, dance’.

Thesaurus:
play verb
1. I, T
• There's a time to work and a time to play.
enjoy yourself • • have fun • • celebrate • |informal have a good/great time • • party • • live it up
Let's play/enjoy ourselves/have fun/celebrate/have a good time/party/live it up.
2. T, I
• He plays football in a local team.
compete • • go in for sth • • enter
play/compete in a competition, etc.
play/compete against sb
3. T, I
• Who played the part of Juliet?
• I could hear a band playing in the distance.
perform • • act • |especially spoken do
play/perform/do a piece
play/act a role/part
a band/musician plays/performs/does sth
Play or act? When you are talking about drama act can be used with an object (act a part) as well as without (He just can't act.); play can only be used with an object (play a part) and is more commonly used in this way than act.  
Synonyms:
entertainment
fun • recreation • relaxation • play • pleasure • amusement
These are all words for things or activities used to entertain people when they are not working.
entertainment • films, television, music, etc. used to entertain people: There are three bars, with live entertainment seven nights a week.
fun • (rather informal) behaviour or activities that are not serious but come from a sense of enjoyment: It wasn't serious— it was all done in fun . ◊ We didn't mean to hurt him. It was just a bit of fun . ◊ The lottery provides harmless fun for millions.
recreation • (rather formal) things people do for enjoyment when they are not working: His only form of recreation is playing football.
relaxation • (rather formal) things people do to rest and enjoy themselves when they are not working; the ability to relax: I go hill-walking for relaxation.
recreation or relaxation?
Both these words can be used for a wide range of activities, physical and mental, but relaxation is sometimes used for gentler activities than recreation: I play the flute in a wind band for recreation. ◊ I listen to music for relaxation.
play • things that people, especially children, do for enjoyment rather than as work: the happy sounds of children at play
pleasure • the activity of enjoying yourself, especially in contrast to working: Are you in Paris for business or pleasure ?
amusement • the fact of being entertained by sth: What do you do for amusement round here?
to do sth for entertainment/fun/recreation/relaxation/pleasure/amusement
to provide entertainment/fun/recreation/relaxation/amusement 
Example Bank:
• Have you ever heard her play?
• He plays for Aston Villa.
• He plays for the Chicago Bears.
• I'm learning to play sax.
• I've never played John at tennis.
• Let's play at pirates!
• She has played in every game this season.
• She was playing cards with her mother.
• The band will be playing live in the studio.
• The little girl was playing with her toys.
• The other children wouldn't let him play.
• These guys make the team very difficult to play against.
• United are difficult to play against.
• a piece that is relatively easy to play
• learning to play the violin
• Do you want to play cards with me?
• Have you ever played her at chess?
• I haven't got anybody to play with!
• I've never played right back before.
• Let's play a different game.
• The part of the Queen was played by Helen Mirren.
• There's a time to work and a time to play.
• They play football on Saturday mornings.
• Who's playing on the wing?

• You'll have to play inside today.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

play

play (RISK MONEY) /pleɪ/
verb [T]
to risk money, especially on the results of races or business deals, hoping to win more money:
He plays the horses/the stock market.

 

play (MOVE) /pleɪ/
verb
1 [I or T] to direct or be directed over or onto something:
Firefighters played their hoses onto the base of the fire.
A fountain was playing (= sending out water) in the courtyard outside.

2 [I + adverb or preposition] (of something you see, such as light) to move quickly or be seen briefly:
A smile played across/over/on his lips.

play (PRODUCE SOUNDS/PICTURES) /pleɪ/
verb [I or T]
1 to perform music on an instrument or instruments:
He learned to play the clarinet at the age of ten.
[+ two objects] Play us a song!/Play a song for us!
On Radio London they play African and South American music as well as rock and pop.
They could hear a jazz band playing in the distance.
Play up a bit (= play louder) - I can hardly hear you!

2 to (cause a machine to) produce sound or a picture:
Play the last few minutes of the video again.

play (ACT) /pleɪ/
verb
1 [I or T] to perform an entertainment or a particular character in a play, film or other entertainment:
In the film version, Kenneth Branagh played the hero.
North-West Opera played to full houses every night.
I didn't realize that 'Macbeth' was playing (= being performed) at the Guildhall.

2 [T] to behave or pretend in a particular way, especially in order to produce a particular effect or result:
to play dead/dumb
Would you mind playing host (= entertaining the guests)?

play (GAME) /pleɪ/
verb
1 [I or T] to take part in a game or other organized activity:
Do you want to play cards/football (with us)?
Irene won't be able to play in the match on Saturday.
Which team do you play for?
Luke plays centre-forward (= plays in that position within the team).

2 [T] to compete against a person or team in a game:
Who are Aston Villa playing next week?

3 [T] to hit or kick a ball in a game:
He played the ball back to the goalkeeper.
A good snooker player takes time deciding which shot to play.

4 [T] to choose a card, in a card game, from the ones you are holding and put it down on the table:
She played the ace of spades.

play (ENJOY) /pleɪ/
verb [I]
When you play, especially as a child, you spend time doing an enjoyable and/or amusing activity:
The children spent the afternoon playing in the garden.
My daughter used to play with the kids next door.

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

play

/pleɪ/
(plays, playing, played)

Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.

1.
When children, animals, or perhaps adults play, they spend time doing enjoyable things, such as using toys and taking part in games.
They played in the little garden...
Polly was playing with her teddy bear.
VERB: V, V with n

2.
When you play a sport, game, or match, you take part in it.
While the twins played cards, Francis sat reading...
Alain was playing cards with his friends...
I used to play basketball...
I want to play for my country...
He captained the team but he didn’t actually play.
V-RECIP: pl-n V n, V n with n, V n (non-recip), V for n (non-recip), V (non-recip)

 

3.
When one person or team plays another or plays against them, they compete against them in a sport or game.
Northern Ireland will play Latvia...
I’ve played against him a few times.
VERB: V n, V against n

 

4.
When you play the ball or play a shot in a game or sport, you kick or hit the ball.
Think first before playing the ball...
I played the ball back slightly.
VERB: V n, V n adv

5.
If you play a joke or a trick on someone, you deceive them or give them a surprise in a way that you think is funny, but that often causes problems for them or annoys them.
Someone had played a trick on her, stretched a piece of string at the top of those steps...
I thought: ‘This cannot be happening, somebody must be playing a joke’.
VERB: V n on n, V n

6.
If you play with an object or with your hair, you keep moving it or touching it with your fingers, perhaps because you are bored or nervous.
She stared at the floor, idly playing with the strap of her handbag.
VERB: V with n

 

8.
If an actor plays a role or character in a play or film, he or she performs the part of that character.
...Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, in which he played Hyde...
His ambition is to play the part of Dracula.
VERB: V n, V n

9.
You can use play to describe how someone behaves, when they are deliberately behaving in a certain way or like a certain type of person. For example, to play the innocent, means to pretend to be innocent, and to play deaf means to pretend not to hear something.
Hill tried to play the peacemaker...
So you want to play nervous today?
= act
V-LINK: V n, V adj

10.
You can describe how someone deals with a situation by saying that they play it in a certain way. For example, if someone plays it cool, they keep calm and do not show much emotion, and if someone plays it straight, they behave in an honest and direct way.
Investors are playing it cautious, and they’re playing it smart.
VERB: V it adj/adv

11.
If you play a musical instrument or play a tune on a musical instrument, or if a musical instrument plays, music is produced from it.
Nina had been playing the piano...
He played for me...
Place your baby in her seat and play her a lullaby...
The guitars played.
VERB: V n, V for n, V n n, V

12.
If you play a record, a CD, or a tape, you put it into a machine and sound is produced. If a record, CD, or tape is playing, sound is being produced from it.
She played her records too loudly...
There is classical music playing in the background.
VERB: V n, V, also V n n

13.
If a musician or group of musicians plays or plays a concert, they perform music for people to listen or dance to.
A band was playing...
He will play concerts in Amsterdam and Paris.
VERB: V, V n

14.
If you ask what someone is playing at, you are angry because you think they are doing something stupid or wrong. (INFORMAL)
What the hell are you playing at?
PHRASE: V inflects [feelings]

15.
When something comes into play or is brought into play, it begins to be used or to have an effect.
The real existence of a military option will come into play...
PHRASE: V inflects

16.
If something or someone plays a part or plays a role in a situation, they are involved in it and have an effect on it.
The UN would play a major role in monitoring a ceasefire.
...the role played by diet in disease.
PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR in n

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

1play /ˈpleɪ/ verb plays; played; play·ing
1 : to do activities for fun or enjoyment

[no obj]

• The children were playing in the yard.
• Can Sara come out and play?
• He played by himself in his room.
- often + with
• She's outside playing with her friends.
• You already have lots of toys to play with.
• a baby playing with his toes

[+ obj]

✦If children play teacher/school (etc.), they play by pretending to be adults.
• She likes to play teacher/doctor with her sisters.
- see also play house at 1house
2 a : to participate in (a game or sport)

[+ obj]

• Did you play any sports in high school?
• She plays soccer.
• Do you want to play (a game of) cards/poker?
• No one dares to play chess with/against him.
• It's not whether you win or lose (that's important), it's how you play the game.
• The children were playing hide-and-seek.

[no obj]

• I have a chess set. Do you want to play?
• It's your turn to play.
• She hurt her wrist but decided to continue playing.
• He played in every major tournament this year.
• He's always dreamed of playing on a professional hockey team.
- often + for
• We never play for money.
• I'm on a basketball team at school, but I also play for fun with my friends.
✦If you play for a particular team, you are a member of that team.
• Babe Ruth played for the Yankees.
• He used to play for Boston but got traded to New York.
b : to compete against (someone) in a game

[+ obj]

• The Yankees are playing the Red Sox tonight at Yankee Stadium.
• No one dares to play him at chess.
• When Tom and I are finished with this game, you can play the winner.

[no obj]

• The Yankees and the Red Sox are playing at Yankee Stadium.
• She has played against some of the best tennis players in the world.
✦If you play (someone) for (something), you play a game in which the winner will be able to take or keep something.
• “Is that the last can of soda?” “Yeah, I'll play you for it.”
c [+ obj] : to have (a particular position on a sports team)
• He dreamed about playing quarterback in the National Football League.
• She played center field in their last game.
• He plays third base.
• What position does he play?
d [+ obj] : to allow (someone) to play during a game especially in a particular position
• Her coach didn't play her in yesterday's game.
• They decided to play him at first base.
e [+ obj] : to place (a playing card) on the table during your turn in a card game
• I played the ace of hearts.
- often used figuratively
• lawyers who play the race card to defend their clients [=who say that their clients were treated unfairly because of their race]
- see also play your cards close to the chest/vest at 1card play your cards right at 1card
f [+ obj] : to move (a piece) during your turn in a chess game
• He played his rook/bishop/queen for the win.
g [+ obj] : to hit, kick, throw, or catch (a ball, puck, etc.)
• You have to play the ball where it lies.
• He played a wedge shot to the green.
• He played a great shot to his opponent's forehand.
• The shortstop played the ball perfectly.
3 [+ obj]
a : to bet money on (something)
• I used to gamble a lot. Mostly, I played the races/horses/slots.
• She only plays the lottery when there's a large jackpot.
b : to invest money in (the stock market) in order to try to earn money
• You can lose a lot of money playing the (stock) market.
4 a : to perform music on (an instrument)

[+ obj]

• She's been playing the violin since she was 10 years old.
• Where did you learn to play the piano?
• He can play guitar and drums.

[no obj]

• He played while she sang.
• Would you play for us?
• He plays in a band.
b [no obj] of an instrument : to produce music
• I could hear a guitar playing in the distance.
c [+ obj] : to perform (a song, a piece of music, etc.) on an instrument
• Would you play something for us?
• The band played their new hit song.
• The conductor had us play the piece again from the beginning.
• The band played a waltz.
• She started her career playing country music.
d [+ obj] : to perform music written by (a particular composer)
• The orchestra will be playing Mozart tonight.
e : to perform music in (a particular place)

[+ obj]

• It was her dream to play Carnegie Hall.
• She prefers playing small concert halls rather than big stadiums.
• The band has been playing bars and nightclubs.

[no obj]

• We mostly play in bars and nightclubs.
5 : to cause (a song, a piece of music, a movie, etc.) to be heard or seen

[+ obj]

• You kids are playing your music too loud.
• The radio station plays mostly hip-hop and R&B.
• Who decides which songs get played on the radio?
• We're waiting for you to play the movie.
• I asked him to play the album/CD/DVD for me.

[no obj]

• Our favorite song was playing on the radio.
• Classical music played softly in the background.
• The movie/DVD is already playing.
6 [no obj] : to be shown or performed usually more than one time
• The film is now playing [=is now being shown] in theaters across the country.
• What's playing at the theater/movies?
• The show has been playing to full/packed houses.
7 a [+ obj] : to act the part of (a particular character) in a film, play, etc.
• He played the lead role in Hamlet.
• Her character is being played by a relatively unknown actress.
• She's not a doctor, but she plays one on TV.
- often used figuratively
• My wife never disciplines the children. She gets to play the good guy while I have to play the bad guy. [=I have to discipline the children]
• I survived a terrible tragedy, but I don't want to play the victim. [=I don't want to act like a victim]
- often used with part or role
• Luck played an important part in their success. [=a lot of their success was because of luck]
• The essay discusses the role that television plays in modern society. [=the effect that television has on modern society]
• He's been playing the part/role of the jealous husband. [=he has been acting like a jealous husband]
• We all have a part/role to play in the future of this company. [=we all will be involved in an important way in the future of this company]
- see also role-play
b [no obj] : to pretend that you have a particular quality or are in a particular condition
• Don't play [=act] all innocent with me!
• She tried to teach her dog to play dead. [=to lie on its back and pretend to be dead]
• If anyone asks you about it, play dumb. [=act like you do not know anything about it]
8 : to act or behave in a particular way

[no obj]

• It's a very competitive business, and not everyone plays fair. = Not everyone plays by the rules.
• If you play smart [=if you make good decisions], you should be able to graduate in four years.

[+ obj]

• She didn't want to seem too eager, so she decided to play it cool. [=to act calm]
• If you play it smart, you should be able to graduate in four years.
• I decided to play it safe [=to be careful and avoid risk or danger] and leave early so that I would be sure to arrive on time.
- see also play by ear at 1ear
9 [no obj] : to do or say things in a joking way
• Don't take it so seriously. He was just playing. [=kidding, joking]
- often + around
• I was just playing around. I didn't really mean it.
• Stop playing around and talk to me seriously for a moment.
10 [+ obj] : to do (something) to someone in order to amuse yourself or others
• He's known for playing pranks, so I wouldn't trust him if I were you.
- usually + on
• Let's play a joke on her.
• The students got in trouble for playing a trick on their teacher.
• I can't believe what I'm seeing. My eyes must be playing tricks on me.
11 [+ obj] informal : to use or control (someone or something) in a clever and unfair way
• I'm never going to let anyone play me again.
• She played you like a fool.
- often + for
• She realized too late that she had been played for a fool.
• They had been playing the guy for a sucker all along.
12 [+ obj] : to base a decision or action on (something)
• Sometimes you just have to play your luck [=to take a chance] and hope that everything turns out okay.
• The coach was playing the odds that his pitcher would get through the inning without giving up a run.
• Criminal investigators need to play [=to act on] their hunches.
13 [no obj] US : to be accepted or received in a particular way
• The script looked good on paper but didn't play well on Broadway.
- often + with
• His idea did not play well with the committee. [=the committee did not like his idea]
14 [no obj] : to move in a lively and irregular way
• A knowing smile played on/about her lips.
• We watched the moonlight playing on the water.
play along [phrasal verb] : to agree to do or accept what other people want
• They wanted me to cooperate with them, but I refused to play along. [=go along]
• If I pretend to be sick, will you play along and tell everyone that I had to go to the doctor?
- often + with
• I refused to play along with them.
• Will you play along with my plan?
play around also Brit play about [phrasal verb]
1 : to have sex with someone who is not your husband, wife, or regular partner
• He's not the kind of guy who plays around. [=fools around, messes around]
- often + on
• She's been playing around on her husband.
- often + with
• She's been playing around with one of her coworkers.
2 : to deal with or treat something in a careless way
• When it comes to protecting his family, he doesn't play around. [=fool around, mess around]
- often + with
• You can't play around with diabetes; it's a very serious disease.
3 : to use or do something in a way that is not very serious
• It's time to stop playing around [=fooling around] and get busy.
- often + on
• I spent the evening playing around on the piano/computer/Internet.
- often + with
• I'm not really a painter; I just like to play around with paints.
4 play around with (something) : to move or change (something) or to think about (something) in different ways often in order to find out what would work best
• I see you've been playing around with the living room furniture again.
• The supervisor played around with our work schedules this week.
• We played around with the idea for a while but eventually realized that it just wouldn't work.
- see also 1play 9 (above)
play at [phrasal verb] play at (something)
1 : to do (something) in a way that is not serious
• They were only playing at trying to fix the problem.
2 chiefly Brit : to play by pretending to be (someone or something)
• (Brit) She liked to play at doctors and nurses as a child.
- often used in the phrase play at being (something)
• boys playing at being soldiers
3 Brit
- used to say in an annoyed way that you do not know the reason for someone's behavior
• What is he playing at?
• I have no idea what he was playing at.
play back [phrasal verb] play back (something) or play (something) back : to cause (recorded sounds or pictures) to be heard or seen
• The machine allows you to record and play back sounds.
• We finished recording our first take and played it back to hear how it sounded.
• He played the tape back to/for us.
- see also playback
play ball
- see 1ball
play down [phrasal verb] play down (something) or play (something) down : to make (something) seem smaller or less important
• She played down [=downplayed] her role in the research.
• It was a significant mistake though our CEO tried to play it down.
play fast and loose : to behave in a clever and dishonest way - usually + with
• He was accused of playing fast and loose with the truth. [=of being dishonest]
• reporters playing fast and loose with the facts
play for laughs or play (something) for laughs : to act in a funny way that makes people laugh
• She's fantastic in serious roles, but she also knows how to play for laughs.
• Most performers would have taken a serious tone during the scene, but he decided to play it for laughs.
play for time : to try to make something happen later instead of sooner : to try to delay something
• They're just playing for time, hoping that the situation will resolve itself.
play games
- see 1game
play God usually disapproving : to make decisions that have a very powerful and important effect on other people's lives
• lawyers who play God with people's lives
play hard to get : to pretend that you are not interested in having a romantic or sexual relationship with someone in order to make that person more attracted to you
• She's been playing hard to get, but I can tell that she likes me.
play into [phrasal verb] play into (something) : to help support (something, such as an idea)
• This new evidence plays into their theory quite nicely.
• Her methods play into the stereotype that lawyers are dishonest.
play into someone's hands or play into the hands of someone : to do something that you do not realize will hurt you and help someone else
• You're only playing into their hands by making such ridiculous accusations.
play off [phrasal verb]
1 chiefly Brit : to participate in a game that decides a winner from people or teams that had the same results in an earlier game : to play in a play-off
• The two teams played off for third place.
- see also play-off
2 play off (someone or something) US : to react to (someone or something) in a pleasing way : to combine with (someone or something) in a way that makes each part better
• In this scene, the two actors play off each other extremely well.
• The sweetness of the wine plays off the sharp flavor of the cheese.
3 play (someone or something) off against (someone or something) : to cause two people or groups to fight or compete with each other in a way that helps you
• They have been playing him off against his old enemies. [=causing him to fight with his old enemies]
• He played one side off against the other.
play on also play upon [phrasal verb] play on/upon (something) : to make people do what you want by using (their emotions, fears, concerns, etc.) in an unfair way
• The company plays on [=takes advantage of] the concerns of parents in order to sell their products.
• Politicians often win votes by playing on [=exploiting] people's emotions.
play out [phrasal verb]
1 a : to happen or occur in usually a gradual way
• Let's wait and see how things play out. [=take place, develop]
• The consequences of the error will play out for several years to come.
• Their personal tragedy was being played out in public.
b play out (something) or play (something) out : to make (something) happen
• She got to play out [=realize] her fantasy of being on TV.
• We watch professional athletes play out [=act out, live out] our dreams on the field.
• This scene plays itself out [=happens] daily in every large city in this country.
2 play out (something) or play (something) out : to finish (something)
• Her coach let her play out the rest of the season but said she wouldn't be allowed on the team next year.
• We'll stop the game after we play out this hand.
playing out dangerous experiments
• That style of music had played itself out [=stopped being current or popular] and the record companies wanted something new.
- see also played-out
play the field : to have romantic or sexual relationships with more than one person at a time : to date more than one person
• He wanted to play the field a bit before he got married and settled down.
play the fool
- see 1fool
play to [phrasal verb]
1 play to (someone or something) : to behave or perform in a particular way for (someone or something) in order to get approval or attention
• He didn't mean what he was saying. He was just playing to the crowd.
• He loves publicity and plays to the cameras every chance he gets.
2 play to (something) : to make use of (something)
• a film that plays to stereotypes of housewives
• In his latest album, he once again plays to his strengths as a classical musician.
play to the gallery
- see gallery
play up [phrasal verb]
1 play up (something) or play (something) up
a : to talk about or treat (something) in a way that gives it special importance : to emphasize or stress (something)
• During the interview, try to play down your weaknesses and play up your strengths.
b : to make (something) seem bigger or more important
• It was only a small achievement though our CEO tried to play it up.
2 play up or play (someone) up Brit : to cause problems or pain
• The children have been playing up [=misbehaving, acting up] again.
• The camera started playing up [=acting up] after I dropped it.
• Whenever it rains, my arthritis starts playing up. [=acting up]
• My back has been playing me up again.
play with [phrasal verb] play with (something)
1 : to move or handle (something) with your hands or fingers often without thinking
• She played with her hair while she talked on the phone.
• Stop playing with your food and eat.
2 : to handle, change, or deal with (something) in a careless way
• I played [=fiddled, messed] with the radio for a while but couldn't get it to work.
• It's important to teach your children not to play with guns/fire/matches.
• Don't play with [=play around with] my heart/emotions.
• You have to take this seriously. You're playing with people's lives!
• They're playing with other people's money.
3 : to think about (something) briefly and not very seriously
• Management has been playing with [=toying with] the idea of moving to a different building.
• I played with the idea of moving to Chicago but ended up staying in New York.
play with fire : to do something that is risky or dangerous
• People who use drugs are playing with fire.
play with words/language : to use words that sound similar or that have several different meanings especially in a clever or funny way
• a writer who enjoys playing with words
play with yourself : to touch your own sex organs for sexual pleasure : masturbate

potato

potato [noun]
US /pəˈteɪ.t̬oʊ/ 
UK /pəˈteɪ.təʊ/ 
Example: 

Potatoes are a rich source of vitamins.

a round white vegetable with a brown, red, or pale yellow skin, that grows under the ground

potato - سیب زمینی
Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

Potatoes are a rich source of vitamins.

Oxford Essential Dictionary

potato

 noun (plural potatoes)
a white vegetable with a brown or red skin that grows underground:
a baked potato
mashed potato

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

potato

potato S2 /pəˈteɪtəʊ $ -toʊ/ BrE AmE noun (plural potatoes)
[Date: 1500-1600; Language: Spanish; Origin: batata, from Taino]

1. [uncountable and countable] a round white vegetable with a brown, red, or pale yellow skin, that grows under the ground
roast/fried/boiled/mashed potato
jacket potato (=cooked in its skin)
Marie stood at the sink, peeling potatoes (=cutting off the skin).
2. [countable] a plant that produces potatoes
• • •
COLLOCATIONS
■ verbs
peel potatoes (=cut the skin off them) Peel and slice the potatoes.
slice potatoes (=cut them into long thin pieces)
dice potatoes (=cut them into small square pieces)
mash potatoes (=crush them until they are smooth, after boiling them)
■ ADJECTIVES/NOUN + potato
boiled potatoes Serve with plain boiled potatoes.
mashed potato(es) (=boiled and crushed until smooth) I like sausages with mashed potatoes.
roast potatoes (=cooked in an oven with fat) traditional roast beef with roast potatoes
a baked/jacket potato (=cooked in its skin) We cooked baked potatoes in the embers of the fire.

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

potato

 

po·tato [potato potatoes]   [pəˈteɪtəʊ]    [pəˈteɪtoʊ]  noun

countable, uncountable (pl. po·tatoes)
a round white vegetable with a brown or red skin that grows underground as the root of a plant also called a potato
Will you peel the potatoes for me?
roast/boiled/baked/fried potatoes

Word Origin:
mid 16th cent.: from Spanish patata, variant of Taino batata ‘sweet potato’. The English word originally denoted the sweet potato and gained its current sense in the late 16th cent.  
Example Bank:
a plate of fried potato skins
baked potatoes with sour cream and chives

potatoes baked in their jackets

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition

potato     / pəteɪ.təʊ /      / -t̬oʊ /   noun   [ C  or  U ]   ( plural   potatoes ) 
  
potato     A1     a round vegetable which grows underground and has white flesh with light brown, red, or pink skin, or the plant on which these grow:  
  boiled/roasted/fried potatoes 
  mashed potato/mashed potatoes   

 
© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

potato

[pəte͟ɪtoʊ]
 ♦♦♦
 potatoes

 1) N-VAR Potatoes are quite round vegetables with brown or red skins and white insides. They grow under the ground.

 2) PHRASE: N inflects You can refer to a difficult subject that people disagree on as a hot potato.
  ...a political hot potato such as abortion.

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

potato

po·ta·to /pəˈteɪtoʊ/ noun, pl -toes
1 : a round root of a plant that has brown, yellow, or red skin and white or yellow flesh and that is eaten as a vegetable

[count]

• baked/mashed/roasted/boiled potatoes

[noncount]

• slices of potato
• mashed potato
potato salad

- see also jacket potato, sweet potato
2 [count] : the plant that produces potatoes
• She's growing carrots and potatoes in her garden this year.

- see also couch potato, hot potato, meat and potatoes, small potatoes

 

paint

paint [verb]
US /peɪnt/ 
UK /peɪnt/ 
Example: 

I made a guitar and painted it red.

To make a picture, design etc using paint

Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

I made a guitar and painted it red.

Oxford Essential Dictionary

paint

 verb (paints, painting, painted)

1 to put paint on something to change the colour:
We painted the walls grey.

2 to make a picture of somebody or something using paints:
I'm painting a picture of some flowers.
My sister paints very well.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

II. paint2 S2 W3 BrE AmE verb
[Word Family: noun: ↑paint, ↑painter, ↑painting, repaint; verb: ↑paint, repaint; adjective: ↑painterly]
[Date: 1100-1200; Language: Old French; Origin: peint, past participle of peindre 'to paint', from Latin pingere]
1. [intransitive and transitive] to put paint on a surface:
The ceiling needs painting.
brightly painted houses
paint something (in) blue/red/green etc
We painted the door blue.
Paint the walls in a contrasting colour.
The living room was painted in pastel shades of pink and blue.
2. [intransitive and transitive] to make a picture, design etc using paint:
A white cross was painted on the door.
Turner is famous for painting landscapes.
paint in oils/watercolours etc (=paint using a particular type of paint)
He paints mainly in acrylics.
3. [transitive] to put a coloured substance on part of your face or body to make it different or more attractive:
The children’s faces were painted to look like animals.
She’d painted her toenails with red nail polish.
4. [transitive] to describe someone or something in a particular way
paint somebody/something as something
She’s often been painted as a tough businesswoman.
paint a grim/rosy/gloomy picture of somebody/something
Dickens painted a grim picture of Victorian life.
The article painted him in a bad light (=described him in a way that made him seem bad).
5. paint the town (red) informal to go out to bars, clubs etc to enjoy yourself
not be as black as you are painted at ↑black1(10)
paint something ↔ out phrasal verb
to cover part of a picture or sign with paint so that it can no longer be seen:
The name of the firm had been partially painted out.
paint over something phrasal verb
to cover a picture or surface with new paint:
Much of the original decoration was painted over.

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

verb
1. transitive, intransitive ~ sth (with sth) to cover a surface or object with paint
~ (sth) We've had the house painted.
Paint the shed with weather-resistant paint.
a brightly painted barge

~ sth + adj./noun The walls were painted yellow.

2. transitive, intransitive to make a picture or design using paints
~ sth/sb to paint portraits
A friend painted the children for me (= painted a picture of the children).
~ sth on sth Slogans had been painted on the walls.
~ (in sth) She paints in oils.

My mother paints well.

3. transitive to give a particular impression of sb/sth
Syn:  portray
~ sb/sth as sth The article paints them as a bunch of petty criminals.

~ sb/sth in… The documentary painted her in a bad light.

4. transitive ~ sth to put coloured make-up on your nails, lips, etc.
more at not as black as he/she/it is painted at  black  adj.
 
Word Origin:
Middle English: from peint ‘painted’, past participle of Old French peindre, from Latin pingere ‘to paint’.  
Thesaurus:
paint verb T
The walls were painted yellow
staindyetint|BrE colour|AmE color
paint/stain/dye/tint/colour sth with sth
paint/stain/dye/tint/colour sth red/yellow/green, etc.
paint/stain wood  
Collocations:
Fine arts
Creating art
make a work of art/a drawing/a sketch/a sculpture/a statue/engravings/etchings/prints
do an oil painting/a self-portrait/a line drawing/a rough sketch
create a work of art/an artwork/paintings and sculptures
produce paintings/portraits/oil sketches/his most celebrated work/a series of prints
paint a picture/landscape/portrait/mural/in oils/in watercolours/(especially US) in watercolors/on canvas
draw a picture/a portrait/a cartoon/a sketch/a line/a figure/the human form/in charcoal/in ink
sketch a preliminary drawing/a figure/a shape
carve a figure/an image/a sculpture/an altarpiece/reliefs/a block of wood
sculpt a portrait bust/a statue/an abstract figure
etch a line/a pattern/a design/a name into the glass
mix colours/(especially US) colors/pigments/paints
add/apply thin/thick layers of paint/colour/(especially US) color/pigment
use oil pastels/charcoal/acrylic paint/a can of spray paint
work in bronze/ceramics/stone/oils/pastels/watercolour/a wide variety of media
Describing art
paint/depict a female figure/a biblical scene/a pastoral landscape/a domestic interior
depict/illustrate a traditional/mythological/historical/religious theme
create an abstract composition/a richly textured surface/a distorted perspective
paint dark/rich/skin/flesh tones
use broad brush strokes/loose brushwork/vibrant colours/a limited palette/simple geometric forms
develop/adopt/paint in a stylized manner/an abstract style
Showing and selling art
commission an altarpiece/a bronze bust of sb/a portrait/a religious work/an artist to paint sth
frame a painting/portrait
hang art/a picture/a painting
display/exhibit modern art/sb's work/a collection/original artwork/ drawings/sculptures/a piece
be displayed/hung in a gallery/museum
install/place a sculpture in/at/on sth
erect/unveil a bronze/marble/life-size statue
hold/host/mount/open/curate/see (especially BrE) an exhibition/(NAmE usually) exhibit
be/go on (BrE) exhibition/(NAmE) exhibit
feature/promote/showcase a conceptual artist/contemporary works
collect African art/modern British paintings/Japanese prints
restore/preserve a fresco/great works of art 
Collocations:
Decorating and home improvement
Houses
refurbish/renovate/ (BrE) do up a building/a house
convert a building/house/room into homes/offices/(especially NAmE) apartments/(BrE) flats
extend/enlarge a house/building/room/kitchen
build (BrE) an extension (to the back/rear of a house)/(NAmE) an addition (on/to sth)/(BrE) a conservatory
knock down/demolish a house/home/building/wall
knock out/through the wall separating two rooms
Decoration
furnish/paint/ (especially BrE) decorate a home/house/apartment/flat/room
be decorated in bright colours/(especially US) colors/in a traditional style/with flowers/with paintings
paint/plaster the walls/ceiling
hang/put up/strip off/remove the wallpaper
install/replace/remove the bathroom fixtures/(BrE) fittings
build/put up shelves
lay wooden flooring/timber decking/floor tiles/a carpet/a patio
put up/hang/take down a picture/painting/poster/curtain
DIY/home improvement
do (BrE) DIY/carpentry/the plumbing/the wiring
make home improvements
add/install central heating/underfloor heating/insulation
fit/install double-glazing/a smoke alarm
insulate your house/your home/the walls/the pipes/the tanks/(especially BrE) the loft
fix/repair a roof/a leak/a pipe/the plumbing/a leaking (especially BrE) tap/(NAmE usually) faucet
block/clog (up)/unblock/unclog a pipe/sink
make/drill/fill a hole
hammer (in)/pull out/remove a nail
tighten/untighten/loosen/remove a screw
saw/cut/treat/stain/varnish/paint wood 
Example Bank:
I like to paint on canvas.
Paint the box all over with varnish.
The walls had been painted very badly.
We painted the walls light green.
a crudely painted human figure
an artist who usually paints in oils
the cheerful, brightly painted doors
A friend painted the children for me.
My mother paints quite well.

We've decided to have the house painted.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition

paint     / peɪnt /   verb   
  
    A2   [ I  or  T ]   to cover a surface with paint:  
  [ + obj + adj   ]   We've painted the bedroom blue. 
  I've been painting all morning. 
  I'll need to paint  over    (= cover with another layer of paint)  these dirty marks on the wall. 
    A1   [ I  or  T ]   to make a picture using paints:  
  All these pictures were painted by local artists. 
      [ T ]   If someone paints their nails or face, they put make-up on that part of their body:  
  She painted her nails bright red. 
 
© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

3.
If you paint a wall or an object, you cover it with paint.
They started to mend the woodwork and paint the walls...
I made a guitar and painted it red.
...painted furniture.
VERB: V n, V n colour, V-ed, also V

4.
If you paint something or paint a picture of it, you produce a picture of it using paint.
He is painting a huge volcano...
Why do people paint pictures?...
I had come here to paint.
VERB: V n, V n, V

5.
When you paint a design or message on a surface, you put it on the surface using paint.
...a machine for painting white lines down roads...
The recesses are decorated with gold stars, with smaller stars painted along the edges.
VERB: V n prep, V-ed

6.
If a woman paints her lips or nails, she puts a coloured cosmetic on them.
She propped the mirror against her handbag and began to paint her lips...
She painted her fingernails bright red.
VERB: V n, V n colour

7.
If you paint a grim or vivid picture of something, you give a description of it that is grim or vivid.
The report paints a grim picture of life there...
VERB: V n

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

2paint verb paints; paint·ed; paint·ing
1 [+ obj] : to cover (something) with paint : to put paint on (something)
• I need to paint the bookcase.
• We're going to paint the room yellow.
• The classroom wall was painted with clouds and rainbows.
2 : to make (a picture or design) by using paints

[+ obj]

• He painted that portrait of his wife.
• She painted the landscape on a square canvas.
• The store carries hand-painted tiles. [=tiles that have pictures or designs on them that were painted by a person and not by a machine]

[no obj]

• She paints well.
• I like to draw and my sister likes to paint.
• The beauty of the world inspires me to paint.
• He paints mostly in oils.
- compare draw
3 [+ obj] : to describe (someone or something) in a particular way
• The study paints a bleak/grim picture of the effects of pollution on animal life.
• Opponents paint a picture of the president as corrupt and irresponsible. = Opponents paint the president as corrupt and irresponsible.
4 [+ obj] : to put makeup on (a part of the body)
• She painted her nails with pink nail polish.
• She put on eye shadow and painted her lips with red lipstick.
paint over [phrasal verb] paint over (something) : to cover (something) with a layer of paint
• They painted over the graffiti.
paint the town (red) informal : to go out drinking, dancing, etc., to have a good time

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