word
[ wurd ]
/ wɜrd /
noun
verb (used with object)
to express in words; select words to express; phrase: to word a contract with great care.
Idioms for word
Origin of word
before 900; Middle English, Old English; cognate with Dutch
woord, German
Wort, Old Norse
orth, Gothic
waurd; akin to OPruss
wirds, Latin
verbum ‘word’, Lithuanian
var̃das ‘name’
SYNONYMS FOR word
OTHER WORDS FROM word
in·ter·word, adjective out·word, verb (used with object) well-word·ed, adjectiveWords nearby word
British Dictionary definitions for eat one's words (1 of 2)
Word
/ (wɜːd) /
noun the Word
Christianity
the 2nd person of the Trinity
Scripture, the Bible, or the Gospels as embodying or representing divine revelation
Often called: the Word of God
Word Origin for Word
translation of Greek
logos, as in John 1:1
British Dictionary definitions for eat one's words (2 of 2)
word
/ (wɜːd) /
noun
verb
(tr)
to state in words, usually specially selected ones; phrase
(tr often foll by up) Australian informal
to inform or advise (a person)
See also
words
Word Origin for word
Old English
word; related to Old High German
wort, Old Norse
orth, Gothic
waurd, Latin
verbum, Sanskrit
vratá command
Idioms and Phrases with eat one's words (1 of 2)
eat one's words
Be forced to retract something one has said, as in The incumbent won easily, so I had to eat my words. This expression was already proverbial in John Ray's English Proverbs (1670). [Second half of 1500s]
Idioms and Phrases with eat one's words (2 of 2)
word