Idioms for load
- to look at; notice; observe.
- to listen to with interest: Did you get a load of what she said?
get a load of, Slang.
load the dice,
to put someone or something in a advantageous or disadvantageous position; affect or influence the result: Lack of sufficient education loaded the dice against him as a candidate for the job.
Origin of load
SYNONYMS FOR load
synonym study for load
7.
Load,
burden referred originally to something placed on a person or animal or put into a vehicle for conveyance. Both
load and
burden are still used in this literal sense, though
burden only infrequently, except in such fixed phrases as
beast of burden and
a ship of 1500 tons burden (carrying capacity). Both words have come to be used figuratively to refer to duties, cares, etc., that are oppressively heavy, and this is now the main meaning of
burden :
You have taken a load off my mind. Some children are a burden.
OTHER WORDS FROM load
load·less, adjective re·load, noun, verb un·der·load, verb (used with object)WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH load
load lodeWords nearby load
lo-cal,
lo-fi,
lo-res,
loa loa,
loach,
load,
load displacement,
load factor,
load fund,
load line,
load module
British Dictionary definitions for get a load of
load
/ (ləʊd) /
noun
verb (mainly tr)
See also
loads
Word Origin for load
Old English
lād course; in meaning, influenced by
lade
1; related to
lead
1
Medical definitions for get a load of
load
[ lōd ]
n.
A departure from normal body content, as of water, salt, or heat. A positive load is a quantity in excess of the normal; a negative load is a deficit.
Scientific definitions for get a load of
load
[ lōd ]
The resistance, weight, or power drain sustained by a machine or electrical circuit. Compare effort.
The power output of a generator or power plant.
The amount of a pathogen or toxic substance present in an organism.
Idioms and Phrases with get a load of (1 of 2)
get a load of
Look at or listen to, as in Get a load of Mike feeding the baby, or Through those thin walls we really got a load of their fight. [Slang; early 1900s]
Idioms and Phrases with get a load of (2 of 2)
load