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due
[ doo, dyoo ]
adjective
- owed at present; having reached the date for payment:
This bill is due.
- owing or owed, irrespective of whether the time of payment has arrived:
This bill is due next month.
- owing or observed as a moral or natural right.
- rightful; proper; fitting:
due care; in due time.
- adequate; sufficient:
a due margin for delay.
- under engagement as to time; expected to be ready, be present, or arrive; scheduled:
The plane is due at noon.
noun
- something that is due, owed, or naturally belongs to someone.
- Usually dues. a regular fee or charge payable at specific intervals, especially to a group or organization:
membership dues.
adverb
- directly or exactly:
a due east course.
- Obsolete. duly.
due
/ djuː /
adjective
- postpositive immediately payable
- postpositive owed as a debt, irrespective of any date for payment
- requisite; fitting; proper
- prenominal adequate or sufficient; enough
- postpositive expected or appointed to be present or arrive
the train is now due
- due toattributable to or caused by
noun
- something that is owed, required, or due
- give a person his dueto give or allow a person what is deserved or right
adverb
- directly or exactly; straight
a course due west
Usage Note
Usage
Pronunciation Note
Other Words From
- dueness noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of due1
Idioms and Phrases
- due to,
- attributable to; ascribable to:
The delay was due to heavy traffic.
- because of; owing to:
All planes are grounded due to fog.
- give someone his / her due,
- to give what justice demands; treat fairly:
Even though he had once cheated me, I tried to give him his due.
- to credit a disliked or dishonorable person for something that is likable, honorable, or the like.
- pay one's dues, to earn respect, a position, or a right by hard work, sacrifice, or experience:
She's a famous musician now, but she paid her dues with years of practice and performing in small towns.
More idioms and phrases containing due
In addition to the idiom beginning with due , also see give credit (where it's due) ; give someone his or her due ; give the devil his due ; in due course ; pay one's dues ; with all due respect .Example Sentences
Lord Prescott ceased to be a member of the House of Lords in July of this year due to non-attendance, having only spoken once in the chamber since suffering a stroke in 2019.
The judge called the requests for leniency "utterly ridiculous" due to the money involved and compared Hwang to the disgraced founder of FTX, Sam Bankman-Fried, who received a 25-year sentence for fraud last year, according to Bloomberg.
Late-stage detection, due in part by anatomical challenges that hinder imaging and sampling of the long and complex gastrointestinal system composed of various organs and tissues, has contributed to the high mortality rate.
"In 2000, around 1.6 million people died each year due to extreme temperatures, both cold and heat. By the end of the century, in the most probable scenario, this figure climbs to 10.8 million, roughly a seven-fold increase. For air pollution, annual deaths in 2000 were about 4.1 million. By the century's close, this number rises to 19.5 million, a five-fold increase," explains Dr. Andrea Pozzer, group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Mainz and adjunct associate professor at The Cyprus Institute in Nicosia, Cyprus.
However, this process is difficult to implement on an industrial scale due to the massive amount of energy required for these systems to operate.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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