air; unstressed th
er]
| 1. | in or at that place (opposed to here ): She is there now. |
| 2. | at that point in an action, speech, etc.: He stopped there for applause. |
| 3. | in that matter, particular, or respect: His anger was justified there. |
| 4. | into or to that place; thither: We went there last year. |
| 5. | (used by way of calling attention to something or someone): There they go. |
| 6. | in or at that place where you are: Well, hi there. |
| 7. | (used to introduce a sentence or clause in which the verb comes before its subject or has no complement): There is no hope. |
| 8. | that place: He comes from there, too. |
| 9. | that point. |
| 10. | that state or condition: I'll introduce you to her, but you're on your own from there on. |
| 11. | (used for emphasis, esp. after a noun modified by a demonstrative adjective): Ask that man there. |
| 12. | (used to express satisfaction, relief, encouragement, approval, consolation, etc.): There! It's done. |
| a combining form meaning “wild animal, beast,” used in the formation of compound words, usually denoting extinct mammals, as adaptions of zoological taxa ending in -therium or -theria: baluchithere. |
there
In addition to the idioms beginning with there, also see all there; get there; hang in (there); here and there; here, there, and everywhere; in there pitching; neither here nor there; no smoke without (where there's smoke there's) fire; nothing to it (there's); somebody up there loves me; take it from here (there); then and there; where there's a will; while there's life there's hope.