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Word Meanings - GRAVITATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To obey the law of gravitation; to exert a force Or pressure, or tend to move, under the influence of gravitation; to tend in any direction or toward any object. Why does this apple fall to the ground Because all bodies gravitate toward each other.

Additional info about word: GRAVITATE

To obey the law of gravitation; to exert a force Or pressure, or tend to move, under the influence of gravitation; to tend in any direction or toward any object. Why does this apple fall to the ground Because all bodies gravitate toward each other. Sir W. Hamilton. Politicians who naturally gravitate towards the stronger party. Macaulay.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of GRAVITATE)

Related words: (words related to GRAVITATE)

  • DROOPER
    One who, or that which, droops.
  • DESCENDING
    Of or pertaining to descent; moving downwards. Descending constellations or signs , those through which the planets descent toward the south. -- Descending node , that point in a planet's orbit where it intersects the ecliptic in passing
  • DESCENDENT
    Descending; falling; proceeding from an ancestor or source. More than mortal grace Speaks thee descendent of ethereal race. Pope.
  • DROOPINGLY
    In a drooping manner.
  • DESCENDIBILITY
    The quality of being descendible; capability of being transmitted from ancestors; as, the descendibility of an estate.
  • DECLINE
    décliner to decline, refuse, fr. L. declinare to turn aside, inflect , avoid; de- + clinare to incline; akin to E. lean. 1. To bend, or lean downward; to take a downward direction; to bend over or hang down, as from weakness, weariness,
  • GRAVITATE
    To obey the law of gravitation; to exert a force Or pressure, or tend to move, under the influence of gravitation; to tend in any direction or toward any object. Why does this apple fall to the ground Because all bodies gravitate toward each other.
  • DESCEND
    To move toward the south, or to the southward. (more info) 1. To pass from a higher to a lower place; to move downwards; to come or go down in any way, as by falling, flowing, walking, etc.; to plunge; to fall; to incline downward; -- the opposite
  • LAPSED
    1. Having slipped downward, backward, or away; having lost position, privilege, etc., by neglect; -- restricted to figurative uses. Once more I will renew His lapsed powers, though forfeit. Milton. 2. Ineffectual, void, or forfeited; as, a lapsed
  • DECLINER
    He who declines or rejects. A studious decliner of honors. Evelyn.
  • DESCENDIBLE
    1. Admitting descent; capable of being descended. 2. That may descend from an ancestor to an heir. "A descendant estate." Sir W. Jones.
  • DECLINED
    Declinate.
  • DROOP
    1. To hang bending downward; to sink or hang down, as an animal, plant, etc., from physical inability or exhaustion, want of nourishment, or the like. "The purple flowers droop." "Above her drooped a lamp." Tennyson. I saw him ten days before he
  • DESCENDER
    One who descends.
  • DESCENDANT
    Descendent.
  • LAPSE
    The termination of a right or privilege through neglect to exercise it within the limited time, or through failure of some contingency; hence, the devolution of a right or privilege. (more info) 1. A gliding, slipping, or gradual falling;
  • DESCENDINGLY
    In a descending manner.
  • PROLAPSE
    The falling down of a part through the orifice with which it is naturally connected, especially of the uterus or the rectum. Dunglison.
  • DELAPSE
    To pass down by inheritance; to lapse. Which Anne derived alone the right, before all other, Of the delapsed crown from Philip. Drayton.
  • RELAPSER
    One who relapses. Bp. Hall.
  • ELAPSE
    To slip or glide away; to pass away silently, as time; -- used chiefly in reference to time. Eight days elapsed; at length a pilgrim came. Hoole.
  • PRETERLAPSED
    Past; as, preterlapsed ages. Glanvill.
  • CONDESCEND
    1. To stoop or descend; to let one's self down; to submit; to waive the privilege of rank or dignity; to accommodate one's self to an inferior. "Condescend to men of low estate." Rom. xii. 16. Can they think me so broken, so debased With corporal
  • RELAPSE
    To fall from Christian faith into paganism, heresy, or unbelief; to backslide. They enter into the justified state, and so continue all along, unless they relapse. Waterland. (more info) 1. To slip or slide back, in a literal sense; to turn back.
  • REDESCEND
    To descend again. Howell.
  • COLLAPSE
    1. To fall together suddenly, as the sides of a hollow vessel; to close by falling or shrinking together; to have the sides or parts of fall in together, or be crushed in together; as, a flue in the boiler of a steam engine sometimes collapses.

 

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