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melt
1[ melt ]
verb (used without object)
- to become liquefied by warmth or heat, as ice, snow, butter, or metal.
- to become liquid; dissolve:
Let the cough drop melt in your mouth.
- to pass, dwindle, or fade gradually (often followed by away ):
His fortune slowly melted away.
- to pass, change, or blend gradually (often followed by into ):
Night melted into day.
Synonyms:
- to become softened in feeling by pity, sympathy, love, or the like:
The tyrant's heart would not melt.
- Obsolete. to be subdued or overwhelmed by sorrow, dismay, etc.
verb (used with object)
- to reduce to a liquid state by warmth or heat; fuse:
Fire melts ice.
- to cause to pass away or fade.
- to cause to pass, change, or blend gradually.
- to soften in feeling, as a person or the heart.
Synonyms: , , ,
noun
- the act or process of melting; state of being melted.
- something that is melted.
- a quantity melted at one time.
- a sandwich or other dish topped with cheese and heated through until the cheese melts:
a tuna melt.
melt
2[ melt ]
noun
- the spleen, especially that of a cow, pig, etc.
melt
/ ɛ /
verb
- to liquefy (a solid) or (of a solid) to become liquefied, as a result of the action of heat
- to become or make liquid; dissolve
cakes that melt in the mouth
- often foll by away to disappear; fade
- foll by down to melt (metal scrap) for reuse
- often foll by into to blend or cause to blend gradually
- to make or become emotional or sentimental; soften
noun
- the act or process of melting
- something melted or an amount melted
melt
- To change from a solid to a liquid state by heating or being heated with sufficient energy at the melting point.
- See also heat of fusion
Derived Forms
- ˈٱ, noun
- ˈپԲԱ, noun
- ˈٲ, adjective
- ˈپԲ, adverb
- ˌٲˈٲ, noun
Other Word Forms
- ·· adjective
- ····ٲ [mel-t, uh, -, bil, -i-tee], noun
- ·Բ· adverb
- ·Բ·Ա noun
- non··· adjective
- ԴDz··Բ adjective
- un··· adjective
- ܲ·· adjective
- ܲ··Բ adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of melt1
Word History and Origins
Origin of melt1
Idioms and Phrases
In addition to the idiom beginning with melt , also see butter wouldn't melt .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Any anxiety about what films to select melts away.
Many jewels were reportedly melted or broken up and sold.
"Just need him blind and face melted," Waugh had messaged Gordon about Mr Simpson.
The documentary captures a sheriff’s deputy reminiscing about her car slowing in the middle of an inferno as her tires melted.
Back in 2015, when I lived there, even a mention of a tuna melt drew a furrowed brow.
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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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