grasp

[ grasp, grahsp ]
/ græsp, grɑsp /

verb (used with object)

verb (used without object)

to make an attempt to seize, or a motion of seizing, something (usually followed by at or for): a drowning man grasping at straws; to grasp for an enemy's rifle.

noun

Origin of grasp

1350–1400; Middle English graspen, grapsen; cognate with Low German grapsen; akin to Old English gegræppian to seize (see grapple)

synonym study for grasp

1. See catch. 10. Grasp, reach refer to the power of seizing, either concretely or figuratively. Grasp suggests actually seizing and closing the hand upon something (or, figuratively, thoroughly comprehending something) and therefore refers to what is within one's possession or immediate possibility of possession: a good grasp of a problem; immense mental grasp. Reach suggests a stretching out of (usually) the hand to touch, strike, or, if possible, seize something; it therefore refers to a potentiality of possession that requires an effort. Figuratively, it implies perhaps a faint conception of something still too far beyond one to be definitely and clearly understood.

OTHER WORDS FROM grasp

Example sentences from the Web for graspable

  • She had the air of snatching at that as something concrete, graspable.

    The Lovely Lady |Mary Austin
  • In the projecting instant, time and the graspable realities had both been annihilated.

    The Real Man |Francis Lynde

British Dictionary definitions for graspable

grasp
/ (ɡrɑːsp) /

verb

noun

Derived forms of grasp

graspable, adjective grasper, noun

Word Origin for grasp

C14: from Low German grapsen; related to Old English græppian to seize, Old Norse grāpa to steal

Idioms and Phrases with graspable

grasp