| 1. | manner, mode, or fashion: a new way of looking at a matter; to reply in a polite way. |
| 2. | characteristic or habitual manner: Her way is to work quietly and never complain. |
| 3. | a method, plan, or means for attaining a goal: to find a way to reduce costs. |
| 4. | a respect or particular: The plan is defective in several ways. |
| 5. | a direction or vicinity: Look this way. We're having a drought out our way. |
| 6. | passage or progress on a course: to make one's way on foot; to lead the way. |
| 7. | Often, ways. distance: They've come a long way. |
| 8. | a path or course leading from one place to another: What's the shortest way to town? |
| 9. | British.
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| 10. | a road, route, passage, or channel (usually used in combination): highway; waterway; doorway. |
| 11. | Law. a right of way. |
| 12. | any line of passage or travel, used or available: to blaze a way through dense woods. |
| 13. | space for passing or advancing: to clear a way through the crowd. |
| 14. | Often, ways. a habit or custom: The grandmother lived by the ways of the old country. |
| 15. | course or mode of procedure that one chooses or wills: They had to do it my way. |
| 16. | condition, as to health, prosperity, or the like: to be in a bad way. |
| 17. | range or extent of experience or notice: the best device that ever came in my way. |
| 18. | a course of life, action, or experience: The way of transgressors is hard. |
| 19. | Informal. business: to be in the haberdashery way. |
| 20. | Nautical.
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| 21. | Machinery. a longitudinal strip, as in a planer, guiding a moving part along a surface. |
| 22. | by the way, in the course of one's remarks; incidentally: By the way, have you received that letter yet? |
| 23. | by way of,
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| 24. | come one's way, to come to one; befall one: A bit of good fortune came my way. |
| 25. | give way,
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| 26. | give way to,
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| 27. | go all the way, Slang.
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| 28. | go out of one's way, to do something that inconveniences one; make an unusual effort: Please don't go out of your way on my account. |
| 29. | have a way with, to have a charming, persuasive, or effective manner of dealing with: He has a way with children; to have a way with words. |
| 30. | have one's way with, (esp. of a man) to have sexual intercourse with, sometimes by intimidating or forcing one's partner. |
| 31. | in a family way, pregnant. |
| 32. | in a way, after a fashion; to some extent: In a way, she's the nicest person I know. |
| 33. | in someone's way, forming a hindrance, impediment, or obstruction: She might have succeeded in her ambition, had not circumstances been in her way. Also, in the way. |
| 34. | lead the way,
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| 35. | make one's way,
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| 36. | make way,
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| 37. | no way, Informal. not under any circumstances; no: Apologize to him? No way! |
| 38. | out of the way,
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| 39. | pave the way to or for. pave (def. 3). |
| 40. | see one's way clear, to regard as suitable or possible; consider seriously: We couldn't see our way clear to spending so much money at once. Also, see one's way. |
| 41. | take one's way, to start out; travel; go: He took his way across the park and headed uptown. |

way (wā) n.
[Middle English, from Old English weg; see wegh- in Indo-European roots.] Synonyms: These nouns refer to paths leading from one place or point to another. Way is the least specific: "Many ways meet in one town" (Shakespeare). We made our way on foot. Show me the way home. Usage Note: Way has long been an intensifying adverb meaning "to a great degree," as in way over budget. This usage is both acceptable and common but has an informal ring. · Way is also used as a general intensifier, as in way cool and way depressing. This locution has expanded beyond its original range of younger speakers, but it is still regarded as slang. · In American English ways is often used as an equivalent of way in phrases such as a long ways to go. The usage is acceptable but is usually considered informal. |
way
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in the way
See in one's way, def. 3.
in the way of. In the nature of, as in He was getting nothing in the way of pay, or They had nothing in the way of an alibi. [Mid-1600s]