verb, -ried, -ry⋅ing, noun, plural -ries.| 1. | to take or support from one place to another; convey; transport: He carried her for a mile in his arms. This elevator cannot carry more than ten people. |
| 2. | to wear, hold, or have around one: He carries his knife in his pocket. He carries a cane. |
| 3. | to contain or be capable of containing; hold: The suitcase will carry enough clothes for a week. |
| 4. | to serve as an agency or medium for the transmission of: The wind carried the sound. He carried the message to me. |
| 5. | to be the means of conveying or transporting (something or someone): The wind carried the balloon out of sight. |
| 6. | to be pregnant with: His wife is carrying twins. |
| 7. | to put ahead to a subsequent time, page, etc., or to a higher authority; continue or transfer: to carry a case to a higher court; to carry a footnote to a new page. |
| 8. | to bear the weight, burden, etc., of; sustain: These piers once carried an arch. |
| 9. | to take (a leading or guiding part), as in singing; bear or sustain (a part or melody). |
| 10. | to hold (the body, head, etc.) in a certain manner: She carries her head high. |
| 11. | to behave or comport (oneself): She carries herself with decorum. |
| 12. | to take the initiative in (a contest): The Giants carried the game to the Browns. |
| 13. | to secure the adoption of (a motion or bill). |
| 14. | to get a plurality or majority of electoral votes in (a district). |
| 15. | to extend or continue in a given direction or to a certain point: to carry the war into enemy territory. |
| 16. | to bring, impart, hear, transmit, or communicate news, a message, etc. |
| 17. | to lead or influence by emotional or intellectual appeal: The actor carried his audience with him. |
| 18. | to bear the major burden of (a group, performance, etc.) by superior talent, determination, etc.: The star carried the whole play. |
| 19. | to serve as a conduit for: This pipe carries water to the house. |
| 20. | to have as an attribute, property, consequence, etc.; presume or entail: Violation carries a penalty of five years in prison. |
| 21. | to support or give validity to (a related claim, argument, etc.): One decision carries another. |
| 22. | Commerce.
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| 23. | to bear as a crop: This land will not carry corn. |
| 24. | to sustain or support: Our grain supply will carry the cattle through the winter. This money will carry us for about a week. |
| 25. | to be enrolled for or to undertake as an amount of work: New students are advised not to carry more than 16 credits. |
| 26. | Golf. to advance beyond or go by (an object or expanse) with one stroke. |
| 27. | Ice Hockey. to cause (a puck) to move forward along the ice and in one's control by a series of light, short taps with the stick. |
| 28. | Hunting. to retain and pursue (a scent). |
| 29. | (in addition) to transfer (a number) from one denomination to the succeeding one. |
| 30. | to have as a maximum working pressure: This boiler carries 190 pounds per square inch. |
| 31. | to act as a bearer or conductor. |
| 32. | to have or exert propelling force. |
| 33. | to be transmitted, propelled, or sustained: My voice carries farther than his. |
| 34. | (of a horse) to bear the head in a particular manner while in action: The horse carries well. |
| 35. | range, as of a gun. |
| 36. | Golf. the distance a stroked ball travels. |
| 37. | land that separates navigable waters and over which a canoe or boat must be carried; portage. |
| 38. | a carrying. |
| 39. | carry away,
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| 40. | carry back, Accounting. to apply (an unused credit or operating loss) to the net income of a prior period in order to reduce the tax for that period. |
| 41. | carry forward,
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| 42. | carry off,
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| 43. | carry on,
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| 44. | carry out,
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| 45. | carry over,
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| 46. | carry through,
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| 47. | carry all before one, to be highly successful: In his academic and social life he carried all before him. |
| 48. | carry a tune, to sing a melody accurately or on key. |
| 49. | carry it off, Informal. to succeed in an action, endeavor, or scheme. |
| 50. | carry the can. can 2 (def. 15). |
| 51. | carry the day, to win the contest or be triumphant; prevail. The Republicans carried the day. |
| 52. | carry too far, to exceed the limits of; go to excess with: She is carrying her crusading too far. |

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