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sand
1[sand]
noun
the more or less fine debris of rocks, consisting of small, loose grains, often of quartz.
Usually sands. a tract or region composed principally of sand.
the sand or a grain of sand in an hourglass.
sands, moments of time or of one's life.
At this stage of his career the sands are running out.
a light reddish- or brownish-yellow color.
Informal., courage; pluck.
verb (used with object)
to smooth or polish with sand, sandpaper, or some other abrasive.
to sand the ends of a board.
to sprinkle with or as if with sand.
to sand an icy road.
to fill up with sand, as a harbor.
to add sand to.
The mischievous child sanded the sugar.
Sand
2[sand, sah
noun
George Lucile Aurore Dupin Dudevant, 1804–76, French novelist.
sand.
3abbreviation
sandwich.
sand
1/ sænd /
noun
loose material consisting of rock or mineral grains, esp rounded grains of quartz, between 0.05 and 2 mm in diameter
(often plural) a sandy area, esp on the seashore or in a desert
a greyish-yellow colour
( as adjective )
sand upholstery
the grains of sandlike material in an hourglass
informal, courage; grit
to put a stop to or a limit on
there is not much time left before death or the end
verb
(tr) to smooth or polish the surface of with sandpaper or sand
to sand a floor
(tr) to sprinkle or cover with or as if with sand; add sand to
to fill or cause to fill with sand
the channel sanded up
Sand
2/ sɑ̃d /
noun
George (ʒɔrʒ), pen name of Amandine Aurore Lucie Dupin. 1804–76, French novelist, best known for such pastoral novels as La Mare au diable (1846) and François le Champi (1847–48) and for her works for women's rights to independence
sand
A sedimentary material consisting of small, often rounded grains or particles of disintegrated rock, smaller than granules and larger than silt. The diameter of the particles ranges from 0.0625 to 2 mm. Although sand often consists of quartz, it can consist of any other mineral or rock fragment as well. Coral sand, for example, consists of limestone fragments.
Other Word Forms
- sandlike adjective
- sandable adjective
- sandless adjective
- unsanded adjective
- well-sanded adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of sand1
Word History and Origins
Origin of sand1
Idioms and Phrases
draw a line in the sand, to set a limit; allow to go up to a point but no further.
Example Sentences
Fitness role model is not one of them, no matter how many times he blasts out of sand traps on company time.
Yet despite the restrictions, she says she "enjoyed a vacation without people" on almost-empty beaches with white sand.
And Squiggles, a female who leaves wavy tracks in the sand.
They have spent months trying to map the extent of a network of sand mines underneath the village but say they are not ready to blame the water leak for the appearance of the hole.
And in the third set, with the teams even at five, Nuss — the smallest player on the sand — swung above her size, disguising her shots by glancing one way and spiking the ball the other.
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Related Words
- boldness
- courage
- derring-do
- determination
- fearlessness www.thesaurus.com
- firmness www.thesaurus.com
- fortitude
- gallantry
- grit
- heroism
- prowess
- tenacity
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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