| 1. | the head or leader of an organized body of people; the person highest in authority: the chief of police. |
| 2. | the head or ruler of a tribe or clan: an Indian chief. |
| 3. | (initial capital letter ) U.S. Army. a title of some advisers to the Chief of Staff, who do not, in most instances, command the troop units of their arms or services: Chief of Engineers; Chief Signal Officer. |
| 4. | Informal. boss or leader: We'll have to talk to the chief about this. |
| 5. | Heraldry.
|
| 6. | highest in rank or authority: the chief priest; the chief administrator. |
| 7. | most important; principal: his chief merit; the chief difficulty. |
| 8. | Archaic. chiefly; principally. |
| 9. | in chief,
|
chief (chēf) n.
Chiefly. [Middle English chef, from Old French, from Latin caput, head; see kaput- in Indo-European roots.] chief'dom n., chief'ship' n. Synonyms: These adjectives refer to what is first in rank or in importance. Chief applies to a person of the highest authority: a chief magistrate. |
chief
|