candle
A stick-shaped piece of wax with a wick (= piece of string) in the middle of it that produces light as it slowly burns
شمع
The room was lit by candles.
اتاق توسط شمع ها روشن شده بود.
Oxford Essential Dictionary
candle
noun
a round stick of wax (= solid oil or fat) with a piece of string in the middle (called a wick) that burns to give light
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
candle
can‧dle S3 /ˈkændl/ BrE AmE noun [countable]
[Date: 600-700; Language: Latin; Origin: candela, from candere; ⇨ ↑candid]
1. a stick of ↑wax with a string through the middle, which you burn to give light
2. can’t hold a candle to somebody/something informal if something or someone cannot hold a candle to something or someone else, they are not as good as the other thing or person:
No other singer can hold a candle to her.
⇨ burn the candle at both ends at ↑burn1(19)
• • •
COLLOCATIONS
■ verbs
▪ light a candle She lit a candle in the church.
▪ blow out a candle Can you blow out all the candles on your birthday cake?
▪ a candle burns (=is giving out light) The house was dark except for one candle burning in a window.
▪ a candle flickers (=the flame moves in an unsteady way) As the door opened, the candles flickered unsteadily.
▪ a candle goes out A sudden draught made the candles go out.
■ adjectives
▪ a lighted candle A procession moved through the village carrying lighted candles.
▪ a flickering candle (=with the flame moving unsteadily) The church was full of flickering white candles.
■ candle + NOUN
▪ a candle flame The candle flame flickered.
• • •
THESAURUS
▪ light something that produces light, especially electric light, to help you to see: She switched the kitchen light on. | The lights in the house were all off.
▪ lamp an object that produces light by using electricity, oil, or gas - often used in names of lights: a bedside lamp | a street lamp | a desk lamp | a table lamp | an old oil lamp | a paraffin lamp
▪ lantern a lamp that you can carry, consisting of a metal container with glass sides that surrounds a flame or light: The miners used lanterns which were lit by candles.
▪ torch British English, flashlight American English a small electric lamp that you carry in your hand: We shone our torches around the cavern.
▪ candle a stick of wax with a string through the middle, which you burn to give light: The restaurant was lit by candles.
▪ bulb the glass part of an electric light, that the light shines from: a 100 watt bulb | an energy-saving light bulb
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
candle
can·dle [candle candles candled candling] [ˈkændl] [ˈkændl] noun
a round stick of wax with a piece of string (called a wick) through the middle which is lit to give light as it burns
• a flickering candle
• The room was lit by candles.
• to blow out/snuff out a candle
more at burn the candle at both ends at burn v., (the game is) not worth the candle at worth adj.
Idiom: cannot hold a candle to somebody
Word Origin:
Old English candel, from Latin candela, from candere ‘be white or glisten’.
Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition
candle / ˈkæn.dl̩ / noun [ C ]
candle
B1 a stick-shaped piece of wax with a wick (= piece of string) in the middle of it that produces light as it slowly burns:
Shall I light a candle?
See picture candelabra, candle
© Cambridge University Press 2013
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary
candle
/kænd(ə)l/
(candles)
1.
A candle is a stick of hard wax with a piece of string called a wick through the middle. You light the wick in order to give a steady flame that provides light.
The bedroom was lit by a single candle.
N-COUNT
2.
If you burn the candle at both ends, you try to do too many things in too short a period of time so that you have to stay up very late at night and get up very early in the morning to get them done.
PHRASE: V inflects
Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary
candle
can·dle /ˈkændl̩/ noun, pl candles [count] : wax that has been formed into a stick or another shape and has a string in the middle that can be burned
burn the candle at both ends
- see 1burn
hold a candle to : to be on the same level as or as good as (something or someone) - used in negative statements
• The new movie doesn't hold a candle to [=it is not as good as] the original version.
not worth the candle chiefly Brit old-fashioned : not worth the necessary effort, cost, or trouble
• The car is so old that replacing the engine is not worth the candle. [=the effort isn't worth the cost]