enter
[ en-ter ]
/ ˈɛn tər /
verb (used without object)
verb (used with object)
Verb Phrases
enter into,
- to participate in; engage in.
- to investigate; consider: We will enter into the question of inherited characteristics at a future time.
- to sympathize with; share in.
- to form a constituent part or ingredient of: There is another factor that enters into the situation.
- to go into a particular state: to enter into a state of suspended animation.
Origin of enter
1200–50; Middle English
entren < Old French
entrer < Latin
intrāre to enter, derivative of
intrā within
OTHER WORDS FROM enter
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH enter
enter interWords nearby enter
British Dictionary definitions for enter on
enter
/ (ˈɛntə) /
verb
Derived forms of enter
enterable, adjective enterer, nounWord Origin for enter
C13: from Old French
entrer, from Latin
intrāre to go in, from
intrā within
Idioms and Phrases with enter on
enter on
Also, enter upon. Set out, begin, as in We are entering on a new era, or They entered upon the most difficult part of the research. [Early 1600s]