adjective, heav⋅i⋅er, heav⋅i⋅est, noun, plural heav⋅ies, adverb | 1. | of great weight; hard to lift or carry: a heavy load. |
| 2. | of great amount, quantity, or size; extremely large; massive: a heavy vote; a heavy snowfall. |
| 3. | of great force, intensity, turbulence, etc.: a heavy sea. |
| 4. | of more than the usual or average weight: a heavy person; heavy freight. |
| 5. | having much weight in proportion to bulk; being of high specific gravity: a heavy metal. |
| 6. | of major import; grave; serious: a heavy offense. |
| 7. | deep or intense; profound: a heavy thinker; heavy slumber. |
| 8. | Military.
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| 9. | hard to bear; burdensome; harsh; oppressive: heavy taxes. |
| 10. | hard to cope with; trying; difficult: a heavy task. |
| 11. | being as indicated to an unusually great degree: a heavy buyer. |
| 12. | broad, thick, or coarse; not delicate: heavy lines drawn in charcoal. |
| 13. | weighted or laden: air heavy with moisture. |
| 14. | fraught; loaded; charged: words heavy with meaning. |
| 15. | depressed with trouble or sorrow; showing sorrow; sad: a heavy heart. |
| 16. | without vivacity or interest; ponderous; dull: a heavy style. |
| 17. | slow in movement or action; clumsy: a heavy walk. |
| 18. | loud and deep; sonorous: a heavy sound. |
| 19. | (of the sky) overcast or cloudy. |
| 20. | exceptionally dense in substance; insufficiently raised or leavened; thick: heavy doughnuts. |
| 21. | (of food) not easily digested. |
| 22. | being in a state of advanced pregnancy; nearing childbirth: heavy with child; heavy with young. |
| 23. | having a large capacity, capable of doing rough work, or having a large output: a heavy truck. |
| 24. | producing or refining basic materials, as steel or coal, used in manufacturing: heavy industry. |
| 25. | sober, serious, or somber: a heavy part in a drama. |
| 26. | Chemistry. of or pertaining to an isotope of greater than normal atomic weight, as heavy hydrogen or heavy oxygen, or to a compound containing such an element, as heavy water. |
| 27. | Slang.
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| 28. | Prosody. (of a syllable)
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| 29. | a somber or ennobled theatrical role or character: Iago is the heavy in Othello. |
| 30. | the theatrical role of a villain. |
| 31. | an actor who plays a theatrical heavy. |
| 32. | Military. a gun of great weight or large caliber. |
| 33. | Slang. a very important or influential person: a reception for government heavies. |
| 34. | heavily. |
heavy
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