Word Meanings - OVERBURDEN - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To load with too great weight or too much care, etc. Sir P. Sidney.
Related words: (words related to OVERBURDEN)
- GREAT-HEARTED
1. High-spirited; fearless. Clarendon. 2. Generous; magnanimous; noble. - GREAT-GRANDFATHER
The father of one's grandfather or grandmother. - GREAT-GRANDSON
A son of one's grandson or granddaughter. - WEIGHTINESS
The quality or state of being weighty; weight; force; importance; impressiveness. - WEIGHTILY
In a weighty manner. - GREAT-HEARTEDNESS
The quality of being greathearted; high-mindedness; magnanimity. - GREAT-GRANDMOTHER
The mother of one's grandfather or grandmother. - GREATLY
1. In a great degree; much. I will greatly multiply thy sorrow. Gen. iii. 16. 2. Nobly; illustriously; magnanimously. By a high fate thou greatly didst expire. Dryden. - WEIGHT
The resistance against which a machine acts, as opposed to the power which moves it. Atomic weight. See under Atomic, and cf. Element. -- Dead weight, Feather weight, Heavy weight, Light weight, etc. See under Dead, Feather, etc. -- Weight of - GREAT-GRANDDAUGHTER
A daughter of one's grandson or granddaughter. - GREAT-GRANDCHILD
The child of one's grandson or granddaughter. - WEIGHTY
1. Having weight; heavy; ponderous; as, a weighty body. 2. Adapted to turn the balance in the mind, or to convince; important; forcible; serious; momentous. "For sundry weighty reasons." Shak. Let me have your advice in a weighty affair. Swift. - GREATNESS
1. The state, condition, or quality of being great; as, greatness of size, greatness of mind, power, etc. 2. Pride; haughtiness. It is not of pride or greatness that he cometh not aboard your ships. Bacon. - GREAT
great, AS. gret; akin to OS. & LG. grt, D. groot, OHG. grz, G. gross. 1. Large in space; of much size; big; immense; enormous; expanded; -- opposed to small and little; as, a great house, ship, farm, plain, distance, length. 2. Large in number; - GREAT WHITE WAY
Broadway, in New York City, in the neighborhood chiefly occupied by theaters, as from about 30th Street about 50th Street; -- so called from its brilliant illumination at night. - WEIGHTLESS
Having no weight; imponderable; hence, light. Shak. - GREATEN
To make great; to aggrandize; to cause to increase in size; to expand. A minister's is to greaten and exalt . Ken. - GREATCOAT
An overcoat. - GREAT-BELLIED
Having a great belly, bigbellied; pregnant; teeming. Shak. - COUNTER WEIGHT
A counterpoise. - INGREAT
To make great; to enlarge; to magnify. Fotherby. - WELTERWEIGHT
1. A weight of 28 pounds (one of 40 pounds is called a heavy welterweight) sometimes imposed in addition to weight for age, chiefly in steeplechases and hurdle races. 2. A boxer or wrestler whose weight is intermediate between that - MAKEWEIGHT
That which is thrown into a scale to make weight; something of little account added to supply a deficiency or fill a gap. - LIGHTWEIGHT
In boxing, wrestling, etc., one weighingnot more than 133 pounds - BUTTERWEIGHT
Over weight. Swift. Note: Formerly it was a custom to give 18 ounces of butter for a pound.