ought
1
[ awt ]
/ ɔt /
auxiliary verb
(used to express duty or moral obligation): Every citizen ought to help.
(used to express justice, moral rightness, or the like): He ought to be punished. You ought to be ashamed.
(used to express propriety, appropriateness, etc.): You ought to be home early. We ought to bring her some flowers.
(used to express probability or natural consequence): That ought to be our train now.
noun
duty or obligation.
Origin of ought
1usage note for ought
Ought1 forms its negative in a number of ways.
Ought not occurs in all types of speech and writing and is fully standard:
The conferees ought not to waste time on protocol.
Oughtn't, largely a spoken form, is found mainly in the Midland and Southern dialects of the United States, where it is almost the universal form.
Hadn't ought is a common spoken form in the Northern dialect area. It is sometimes condemned in usage guides and is uncommon in educated speech except of the most informal variety.
Didn't ought and
shouldn't ought are considered nonstandard.
Both positive and negative forms of ought are almost always followed by the infinitive form: We ought to go now. You ought not to worry about it. Occasionally, to is omitted after the negative construction: Congress ought not adjourn without considering this bill.
Both positive and negative forms of ought are almost always followed by the infinitive form: We ought to go now. You ought not to worry about it. Occasionally, to is omitted after the negative construction: Congress ought not adjourn without considering this bill.
Words nearby ought
Definition for ought (2 of 5)
Definition for ought (3 of 5)
Definition for ought (4 of 5)
aught
1
or ought
[ awt ]
/ ɔt /
noun
anything whatever; any part: for aught I know.
adverb
Archaic.
in any degree; at all; in any respect.
Origin of aught
1
before 1000; Middle English
aught, ought, Old English
āht, āwiht, ōwiht, equivalent to
ā, ō ever +
wiht thing,
wight1
Definition for ought (5 of 5)
aught
2
or ought
[ awt ]
/ ɔt /
noun
a cipher (0); zero.
aughts,
the first decade of any century, especially the years 1900 through 1909 or 2000 through 2009.
Example sentences from the Web for ought
British Dictionary definitions for ought (1 of 5)
ought
1
/ (ɔːt) /
verb (foll by to; takes an infinitive or implied infinitive)
to indicate duty or obligation
you ought to pay your dues
to express prudent expediency
you ought to be more careful with your money
(usually with reference to future time) to express probability or expectation
you ought to finish this work by Friday
to express a desire or wish on the part of the speaker
you ought to come next week
Word Origin for ought
Old English
āhte, past tense of
āgan to
owe; related to Gothic
aihta
usage for ought
In correct English,
ought is not used with
did or
had. I ought not to do it, not
I didn't ought to do it;
I ought not to have done it, not
I hadn't ought to have done it
British Dictionary definitions for ought (2 of 5)
British Dictionary definitions for ought (3 of 5)
Word Origin for ought
C19: mistaken division of
a nought as
an ought; see
nought
British Dictionary definitions for ought (4 of 5)
aught
1
ought used with a negative or in conditional or interrogative sentences or clauses
archaic, or literary
pronoun
anything at all; anything whatever (esp in the phrase for aught I know)
adverb
dialect
in any least part; to any degree
Word Origin for aught
Old English
āwiht, from
ā ever,
ay
1 +
wiht thing; see
wight
1