| 1. | to go up or ascend, esp. by using the hands and feet or feet only: to climb up a ladder. |
| 2. | to rise slowly by or as if by continued effort: The car laboriously climbed to the top of the mountain. |
| 3. | to ascend or rise: The plane climbed rapidly and we were soon at 35,000 feet. Temperatures climbed into the 80s yesterday. |
| 4. | to slope upward: The road climbs steeply up to the house. |
| 5. | to ascend by twining or by means of tendrils, adhesive tissues, etc., as a plant: The ivy climbed to the roof. |
| 6. | to proceed or move by using the hands and feet, esp. on an elevated place; crawl: to climb along a branch; to climb around on the roof. |
| 7. | to ascend in prominence, fortune, etc.: From lowly beginnings he climbed to the highest office in the land. |
| 8. | to ascend, go up, or get to the top of, esp. by the use of the hands and feet or feet alone or by continuous or strenuous effort: to climb a rope; to climb the stairs; to climb a mountain. |
| 9. | to go to the top of and over: The prisoners climbed the wall and escaped. |
| 10. | a climbing; an ascent by climbing: It was a long climb to the top of the hill. |
| 11. | a place to be climbed: That peak is quite a climb. |
| 12. | climb down,
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| 13. | climb the walls. wall (def. 7). |
climb (klīm) v. climbed, climb·ing, climbs v. tr.
[Middle English climben, from Old English climban.] climb'a·ble (klī'mə-bəl) adj. |
climb
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