| a scrap or morsel of food left at a meal. |
| the offspring of a zebra and a donkey. |
by (baɪ) ![]() | |
| —prep | |
| 1. | used to indicate the agent after a passive verb: seeds eaten by the birds |
| 2. | used to indicate the person responsible for a creative work: this song is by Schubert |
| 3. | via; through: enter by the back door |
| 4. | followed by a gerund to indicate a means used: he frightened her by hiding behind the door |
| 5. | beside; next to; near: a tree by the house |
| 6. | passing the position of; past: he drove by the old cottage |
| 7. | not later than; before: return the books by Tuesday |
| 8. | used to indicate extent, after a comparative: it is hotter by five degrees than it was yesterday |
| 9. | (esp in oaths) invoking the name of: I swear by all the gods |
| 10. | multiplied by: four by three equals twelve |
| 11. | (in habitual sentences) during the passing of (esp in the phrases by day, by night) |
| 12. | placed between measurements of the various dimensions of something: a plank fourteen inches by seven |
| —adv | |
| 13. | near: the house is close by |
| 14. | away; aside: he put some money by each week for savings |
| 15. | passing a point near something; past: he drove by |
| 16. | (Scot) past; over and done with: that's a' by now |
| 17. | (Scot) aside; behind one: you must put that by you |
| —n , byes | |
| 18. | a variant spelling of bye |
| [Old English bī; related to Gothic bi, Old High German bī, Sanskrit abhi to, towards] | |
| by | |
| —the internet domain name for | |
| Belarus | |
| by and large | |
| —adv | |
| in general; on the whole | |
| [C17: originally nautical (meaning: to the wind and off it)] | |
| BY budget year |
in the expression "by myself" (A.V., 1 Cor. 4:4), means, as rendered in the Revised Version, "against myself."
by and large
For the most part, generally speaking, as in By and large the novel was a success. This expression originated in 17th-century seamanship, where it referred to sailing into the wind and then off it, which made it easier to steer. By the early 1700s the term had been broadened to mean "in one direction and another," whence its present meaning of "in general." For a synonym, see for the most part.