| chat, to converse |
| to introduce subtleties into or argue subtly about. |
round (raʊnd) ![]() | |
| —adj | |
| 1. | having a flat circular shape, as a disc or hoop |
| 2. | having the shape of a sphere or ball |
| 3. | curved; not angular |
| 4. | involving or using circular motion |
| 5. | (prenominal) complete; entire: a round dozen |
| 6. | maths |
| a. forming or expressed by an integer or whole number, with no fraction | |
| b. expressed to the nearest ten, hundred, or thousand: in round figures | |
| 7. | (of a sum of money) considerable; ample |
| 8. | fully depicted or developed, as a character in a book |
| 9. | full and plump: round cheeks |
| 10. | (of sound) full and sonorous |
| 11. | (of pace) brisk; lively |
| 12. | (prenominal) (of speech) candid; straightforward; unmodified: a round assertion |
| 13. | (of a vowel) pronounced with rounded lips |
| —n | |
| 14. | a round shape or object |
| 15. | in the round |
| a. in full detail | |
| b. theatre with the audience all round the stage | |
| 16. | a session, as of a negotiation: a round of talks |
| 17. | a series, cycle, or sequence: a giddy round of parties |
| 18. | the daily round the usual activities of one's day |
| 19. | a stage of a competition: he was eliminated in the first round |
| 20. | (often plural) a series of calls, esp in a set order: a doctor's rounds; a milkman's round |
| 21. | a playing of all the holes on a golf course |
| 22. | a single turn of play by each player, as in a card game |
| 23. | one of a number of periods constituting a boxing, wrestling, or other match, each usually lasting three minutes |
| 24. | archery a specified number of arrows shot from a specified distance |
| 25. | a single discharge by a number of guns or a single gun |
| 26. | a bullet, blank cartridge, or other charge of ammunition |
| 27. | a number of drinks bought at one time for a group of people |
| 28. | a single slice of bread or toast or two slices making a single serving of sandwiches |
| 29. | a general outburst of applause, cheering, etc |
| 30. | movement in a circle or around an axis |
| 31. | music a part song in which the voices follow each other at equal intervals at the same pitch |
| 32. | Compare change a sequence of bells rung in order of treble to tenor |
| 33. | a dance in which the dancers move in a circle |
| 34. | a cut of beef from the thigh between the rump and the shank |
| 35. | go the rounds, make the rounds |
| a. to go from place to place, as in making deliveries or social calls | |
| b. (of information, rumour, etc) to be passed around, so as to be generally known | |
| —prep | |
| 36. | surrounding, encircling, or enclosing: a band round her head |
| 37. | on all or most sides of: to look round one |
| 38. | on or outside the circumference or perimeter of: the stands round the racecourse |
| 39. | situated at various points in: a lot of shelves round the house |
| 40. | from place to place in: driving round Ireland |
| 41. | somewhere in or near: to stay round the house |
| 42. | making a circuit or partial circuit about: the ring road round the town |
| 43. | reached by making a partial circuit about something: the shop round the corner |
| 44. | revolving round a centre or axis: the earth's motion round its axis |
| 45. | so as to have a basis in: the story is built round a good plot |
| —adv | |
| 46. | on all or most sides: the garden is fenced all round; the crowd gathered round |
| 47. | on or outside the circumference or perimeter: the racing track is two miles round |
| 48. | in all directions from a point of reference: he owns the land for ten miles round |
| 49. | to all members of a group: pass the food round |
| 50. | in rotation or revolution: the wheels turn round |
| 51. | by a circuitous route: the road to the farm goes round by the pond |
| 52. | to a specific place: she came round to see me |
| 53. | all year round throughout the year; in every month |
| —vb | |
| 54. | to make or become round |
| 55. | (tr) to encircle; surround |
| 56. | to move or cause to move with circular motion: to round a bend |
| 57. | (tr) |
| a. to pronounce (a speech sound) with rounded lips | |
| b. to purse (the lips) | |
| [C13: from Old French ront, from Latin rotundus round, from rota a wheel] | |
| 'roundness | |
| —n | |
A song that can be begun at different times by different singers, but with harmonious singing (see harmony) as the result. “Row, Row, Row Your Boat” is a round.
round
In addition to the idioms beginning with round, also see all year round; bring around (round); come around (round); get around (round); in round numbers; in the round; make the rounds; other way round; pull round; rally around. Also see under around.