| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
Gat
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| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
gat3
Audio Help [gat] Pronunciation Key
Audio Help [gat] Pronunciation Key –noun
| a passage or channel that extends inland from a shore through shoals, cliffs, etc. |
[Origin: 1715–25; < ON gat hole, opening
]
] | Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
get
Audio Help [get] Pronunciation Key verb, got or (Archaic
) gat; got or got·ten; get·ting, noun
—Related forms
Audio Help [get] Pronunciation Key verb, got or (Archaic
) gat; got or got·ten; get·ting, noun –verb (used with object)
–verb (used without object)
–noun
—Verb phrases
—Idioms
| 1. | to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension. |
| 2. | to cause to be in one's possession or succeed in having available for one's use or enjoyment; obtain; acquire: to get a good price after bargaining; to get oil by drilling; to get information. |
| 3. | to go after, take hold of, and bring (something) for one's own or for another's purposes; fetch: Would you get the milk from the refrigerator for me? |
| 4. | to cause or cause to become, to do, to move, etc., as specified; effect: to get one's hair cut; to get a person drunk; to get a fire to burn; to get a dog out of a room. |
| 5. | to communicate or establish communication with over a distance; reach: You can always get me by telephone. |
| 6. | to hear or hear clearly: I didn't get your last name. |
| 7. | to acquire a mental grasp or command of; learn: to get a lesson. |
| 8. | to capture; seize: Get him before he escapes! |
| 9. | to receive as a punishment or sentence: to get a spanking; to get 20 years in jail. |
| 10. | to prevail on; influence or persuade: We'll get him to go with us. |
| 11. | to prepare; make ready: to get dinner. |
| 12. | (esp. of animals) to beget. |
| 13. | Informal. to affect emotionally: Her pleas got me. |
| 14. | to hit, strike, or wound: The bullet got him in the leg. |
| 15. | Informal. to kill. |
| 16. | Informal. to take vengeance on: I'll get you yet! |
| 17. | to catch or be afflicted with; come down with or suffer from: He got malaria while living in the tropics. She gets butterflies before every performance. |
| 18. | Informal. to puzzle; irritate; annoy: Their silly remarks get me. |
| 19. | Informal. to understand; comprehend: I don't get the joke. This report may be crystal-clear to a scientist, but I don't get it. |
| 20. | to come to a specified place; arrive; reach: to get home late. |
| 21. | to succeed, become enabled, or be permitted: You get to meet a lot of interesting people. |
| 22. | to become or to cause oneself to become as specified; reach a certain condition: to get angry; to get sick. |
| 23. | (used as an auxiliary verb fol. by a past participle to form the passive): to get married; to get elected; to get hit by a car. |
| 24. | to succeed in coming, going, arriving at, visiting, etc. (usually fol. by away, in, into, out, etc.): I don't get into town very often. |
| 25. | to bear, endure, or survive (usually fol. by through or over): Can he get through another bad winter? |
| 26. | to earn money; gain. |
| 27. | Informal. to leave promptly; scram: He told us to get. |
| 28. | to start or enter upon the action of (fol. by a present participle expressing action): to get moving; Get rolling. |
| 29. | an offspring or the total of the offspring, esp. of a male animal: the get of a stallion. |
| 30. | a return of a ball, as in tennis, that would normally have resulted in a point for the opponent. |
| 31. | British Slang.
|
| 32. | get about,
|
| 33. | get across,
|
| 34. | get ahead, to be successful, as in business or society: She got ahead by sheer determination. |
| 35. | get ahead of,
|
| 36. | get along,
|
| 37. | get around,
|
| 38. | get at,
|
| 39. | get away,
|
| 40. | get away with, to perpetrate or accomplish without detection or punishment: Some people lie and cheat and always seem to get away with it. |
| 41. | get by,
|
| 42. | get down,
|
| 43. | get in,
|
| 44. | get off,
|
| 45. | get on or along,
|
| 46. | get out,
|
| 47. | get over,
|
| 48. | get through,
|
| 49. | get to,
|
| 50. | get back,
|
| 51. | get even. even1 (def. 26). |
| 52. | get going,
|
| 53. | get it, Informal.
|
| 54. | get it off, Slang: Vulgar. to experience orgasm. |
| 55. | get it on,
|
| 56. | get it up, Slang: Vulgar, to achieve an erection of the penis. |
| 57. | get off on, Slang. to become enthusiastic about or excited by: After years of indifference, she's getting off on baseball. |
| 58. | get round. get around. |
| 59. | get the lead out. lead2 (def. 15). |
| 60. | get there, to reach one's goal; succeed: He wanted to be a millionaire but he died before he got there. |
| 61. | get together,
|
| 62. | get up,
|
| 63. | has or have got,
|
[Origin: 1150–1200; (v.) ME geten < ON geta to obtain, beget; c. OE -gietan (> ME yeten), G -gessen, in vergessen to forget; (n.) ME: something gotten, offspring, deriv. of the v.
]
] —Related forms
get·ta·ble, get·a·ble, adjective
—Synonyms 1, 2. Get, obtain, acquire, procure, secure imply gaining possession of something. Get may apply to coming into possession in any manner, and either voluntarily or not. Obtain suggests putting forth effort to gain possession, and acquire stresses the possessing after an (often prolonged) effort. Procure suggests the method of obtaining, as that of search or choice. Secure, considered in bad taste as a would-be-elegant substitute for get, is, however, when used with discrimination, a perfectly proper word. It suggests making possession sure and safe, after obtaining something by competition or the like. 2. win, gain. 7. apprehend, grasp. 10. induce, dispose. 12. engender.
—Usage note For nearly 400 years, forms of get have been used with a following past participle to form the passive voice: She got engaged when she was 19. He won't get accepted with those grades. This use of get rather than of forms of to be in the passive is found today chiefly in speech and informal writing.
In British English got is the regular past participle of get, and gotten survives only in a few set phrases, such as ill-gotten gains. In American English gotten, although occasionally criticized, is an alternative standard past participle in most senses, especially in the senses “to receive” or “to acquire”: I have gotten (or got) all that I ever hoped for.
Have or has got in the sense “must” has been in use since the early 19th century; often the have or has is contracted: You've got to carry your passport at all times. The use of have (or has) got in the sense of “to possess” goes back to the 15th century; it is also frequently contracted: She's got a master's degree in biology. These uses are occasionally criticized as redundant on the grounds that have alone expresses the meaning adequately, but they are well established and fully standard in all varieties of speech and writing. In some contexts in American English, substituting gotten for got produces a change in meaning: She's got (possesses) a new job. She's gotten (has aquired) a new job. He's got to (must) attend the wedding. He's gotten to (has been allowed or enabled to) attend. The children have got (are suffering from) the measles. The children have gotten (have caught) the measles. The use of got without have or has to mean “must” (I got to buy a new suit) is characteristic of the most relaxed, informal speech and does not occur in edited writing except in representations of speech. Gotta is a pronunciation spelling representing this use.
In British English got is the regular past participle of get, and gotten survives only in a few set phrases, such as ill-gotten gains. In American English gotten, although occasionally criticized, is an alternative standard past participle in most senses, especially in the senses “to receive” or “to acquire”: I have gotten (or got) all that I ever hoped for.
Have or has got in the sense “must” has been in use since the early 19th century; often the have or has is contracted: You've got to carry your passport at all times. The use of have (or has) got in the sense of “to possess” goes back to the 15th century; it is also frequently contracted: She's got a master's degree in biology. These uses are occasionally criticized as redundant on the grounds that have alone expresses the meaning adequately, but they are well established and fully standard in all varieties of speech and writing. In some contexts in American English, substituting gotten for got produces a change in meaning: She's got (possesses) a new job. She's gotten (has aquired) a new job. He's got to (must) attend the wedding. He's gotten to (has been allowed or enabled to) attend. The children have got (are suffering from) the measles. The children have gotten (have caught) the measles. The use of got without have or has to mean “must” (I got to buy a new suit) is characteristic of the most relaxed, informal speech and does not occur in edited writing except in representations of speech. Gotta is a pronunciation spelling representing this use.
—Pronunciation note The pronunciation
Audio Help [git] Pronunciation Key for get has existed since the 16th century. The same change is exhibited in
Audio Help [kin] for can and
Audio Help [yit] for yet. The pronunciation [git] is not regional and occurs in all parts of the country. It is most common as an unstressed syllable: Let's get going! [lets--git-goh-ing]. In educated speech the pronunciation [git] in stressed syllables is rare and sometimes criticized. When get is an imperative meaning “leave immediately,” the pronunciation is usually facetious: Now get! [nou--git].
Audio Help [git] Pronunciation Key for get has existed since the 16th century. The same change is exhibited in
Audio Help [kin] for can and
Audio Help [yit] for yet. The pronunciation [git] is not regional and occurs in all parts of the country. It is most common as an unstressed syllable: Let's get going! [lets--git-goh-ing]. In educated speech the pronunciation [git] in stressed syllables is rare and sometimes criticized. When get is an imperative meaning “leave immediately,” the pronunciation is usually facetious: Now get! [nou--git].| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
| gat 1
Audio Help (gāt) Pronunciation Key
n. A narrow passage extending inland from a shore; a channel. [Probably Dutch, from Middle Dutch.] |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
| gat 2
Audio Help (gāt) Pronunciation Key
n. Slang A pistol. [Short for Gat(ling gun).] |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
| gat 3
Audio Help (gāt) Pronunciation Key
v. Archaic A past tense of get. |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
gat
"pistol," 1904, slang shortening of Gatling (gun); by 1880, gatlin was slang for a gun of any sort.
| Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper |
| gat | |
noun | |
| a gangster's pistol |
| WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University. |
GAT
Generalized Algebraic Translator. Improved version of IT. On IBM 650 RAMAC.
[Sammet 1969, p. 142].
| The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © 1993-2007 Denis Howe |
Gat
Gat\ (g[a^]t), imp. of Get. [Obs.]| Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc. |
GAT
GAT: in Acronym Finder
| Acronym Finder, © 1988-2007 Mountain Data Systems |
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