adjective, -er, -est, noun, plural gross for 11, gross⋅es for 12, 13; verb | 1. | without deductions; total, as the amount of sales, salary, profit, etc., before taking deductions for expenses, taxes, or the like (opposed to net ): gross earnings; gross sales. |
| 2. | unqualified; complete; rank: a gross scoundrel. |
| 3. | flagrant and extreme: gross injustice. |
| 4. | indelicate, indecent, obscene, or vulgar: gross remarks. |
| 5. | lacking in refinement, good manners, education, etc.; unrefined. |
| 6. | large, big, or bulky. |
| 7. | extremely or excessively fat. |
| 8. | thick; dense; heavy: gross vegetation. |
| 9. | of or concerning only the broadest or most general considerations, aspects, etc. |
| 10. | Slang. extremely objectionable, offensive, or disgusting: He wore an outfit that was absolutely gross. |
| 11. | a group of 12 dozen, or 144, things. Abbreviation: gro. |
| 12. | total income from sales, salary, etc., before any deductions (opposed to net ). |
| 13. | Obsolete. the main body, bulk, or mass. |
| 14. | to have, make, or earn as a total before any deductions, as of taxes, expenses, etc.: The company grossed over three million dollars last year. |
| 15. | gross out, Slang.
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gross (grōs) adj. gross·er, gross·est
To earn as a total income or profit before deductions. Phrasal Verb(s): gross out Slang To fill with disgust; nauseate: "The trick in making a family film . . . is finding ways to interest grown-ups without boring, confusing, or grossing out the younger set" (Christian Science Monitor). [Middle English, large, from Old French gros, from Late Latin grossus, thick. N., sense 2, Middle English grosse, from Old French grosse (douzain), large (dozen), feminine of gros.] gross'er n., gross'ly adv., gross'ness n. |
Exclusive of deductions, prior to taxation, as in gross income. (Compare net.) Total, aggregate, as in gross domestic product.
gross
[gros]
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Gross (grōs), Samuel David. 1805-1884.
American surgeon and educator who wrote widely influential medical treatises, including A System of Surgery (1859).