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large
[ lahrj ]
adjective
- of more than average size, quantity, degree, etc.; exceeding that which is common to a kind or class; big; great:
a large house; a large number; in large measure; to a large extent.
Synonyms: , , , , , ,
Antonyms:
- on a great scale:
a large producer of kitchen equipment.
- of great scope or range; extensive; broad.
- grand or pompous:
a man given to large, bombastic talk.
- (of a map, model, etc.) representing the features of the original with features of its own that are relatively large so that great detail may be shown.
- famous; successful; important:
He's very large in financial circles.
- Obsolete. generous; bountiful; lavish.
- Obsolete.
- unrestrained in the use of language; gross; improper.
- unrestrained in behavior or manner; uninhibited.
- Nautical. free ( def 33 ).
noun
- Music. the longest note in mensural notation.
- Obsolete. generosity; bounty.
adverb
- Nautical. with the wind free or abaft the beam so that all sails draw fully.
large
/ ɑː /
adjective
- having a relatively great size, quantity, extent, etc; big
- of wide or broad scope, capacity, or range; comprehensive
a large effect
- having or showing great breadth of understanding
a large heart
- nautical (of the wind) blowing from a favourable direction
- rare.overblown; pretentious
- generous
- obsolete.(of manners and speech) gross; rude
noun
- at large
- (esp of a dangerous criminal or wild animal) free; not confined
- roaming freely, as in a foreign country
- as a whole; in general
- in full detail; exhaustively
- See ambassador
- in large or in the largeas a totality or on a broad scale
adverb
- nautical with the wind blowing from a favourable direction
- by and large
- sentence modifier generally; as a rule
by and large, the man is the breadwinner
- nautical towards and away from the wind
- loom largeto be very prominent or important
Derived Forms
- ˈԱ, noun
Other Word Forms
- ·Ա noun
- ·· adjective
- ܱ·ٰ· adjective
- ܲ· adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of large1
Word History and Origins
Origin of large1
Idioms and Phrases
- at large,
- free from restraint or confinement; at liberty:
The murderer is still at large.
- to a considerable extent; at length:
to treat a subject at large.
- as a whole; in general:
the country at large.
- Also at-large. representing the whole of a state, district, or body rather than one division or part of it:
a delegate at large.
- Also at-large. having a general, as opposed to a specific, role in an organization or project:
She’s the magazine’s editor-at-large.
- in large, on a large scale; from a broad point of view: Also in the large.
a problem seen in large.
More idioms and phrases containing large
see at large ; big (large) as life ; by and large ; cog in the (a large) wheel ; in some (large) measure ; loom large ; writ large .Example Sentences
Others have speculated that they may have been willing recruits into the ranks of organized crime, which is among Mexico’s largest employers.
The proposed development – which would be one of the largest in the world – consists of up to 307 turbines across an area four times the size of Edinburgh.
Farmer Salam Saeed, whose land is in the shadow of a large Turkish base, hasn't been able to cultivate his vineyard for the past three years.
Increased support for Canada's two largest parties has come at the expense of smaller parties, particularly the NDP, whose share of the popular vote is down by around 12 percentage points.
Patricia Tourancheau, a crime reporter and author of a book on the robbery, told the BBC that Paris courts were busy with large terrorism trials for several years, which created a backlog.
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Related Words
When To Use
are other ways to say large?
Something that is large is of more than average size, quantity, or degree. How does large compare to great and big? Learn more on .
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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