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straight
[ streyt ]
adjective
- without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct:
a straight path.
Antonyms: crooked
- exactly vertical or horizontal; in a perfectly vertical or horizontal plane:
a straight table.
- (of a line) generated by a point moving at a constant velocity with respect to another point.
- evenly or uprightly formed or set:
straight shoulders.
straight speaking.
Antonyms: circuitous
- honest, honorable, or upright, as conduct, dealings, methods, or persons.
- Informal. reliable, as a report or information.
- right or correct, as reasoning, thinking, or a thinker:
Her book on the subject is a cornucopia of sanity, straight thinking, and clear vision.
- in the proper order or condition:
Things are straight now.
- continuous or unbroken:
in straight succession.
- thoroughgoing or unreserved:
a straight Republican.
- supporting or cast for all candidates of one political party:
to vote a straight ticket.
- unmodified or unaltered:
a straight comedy.
- without change in the original melody or tempo:
She does straight songs, with just the piano backing her.
- Informal.
- free from using narcotics.
- not engaged in crime; law-abiding; reformed.
- not mixed with anything; undiluted, as whiskey.
- Theater. (of acting) straightforward; not striving for effect.
- Journalism. written or to be written in a direct and objective manner, with no attempt at individual styling, comment, etc.:
She gave me a straight story.
Treat it as straight news.
- Cards. containing cards in consecutive denominations, as a two, three, four, five, and six, in various suits.
adverb
- in a straight line:
to walk straight.
- in an even form or position:
pictures hung straight.
- in an erect posture:
to stand up straight.
- directly:
to go straight to a place.
- honestly, honorably, or virtuously:
to live straight.
- without intricate involvement; not in a roundabout way; to the point.
- in a steady course (often followed by on ):
to keep straight on after the second traffic light.
- into the proper form or condition; in order:
to put a room straight.
- in possession of the truth or of true ideas:
I want to set you straight before you make mistakes.
- sold without discount regardless of the quantity bought:
Candy bars are twenty cents straight.
- Journalism. directly and objectively:
Write the circus story straight.
- without personal embellishments, additions, etc.:
Tell the story straight.
Sing the song straight.
- (of liquor) served or drunk without ice, a mixer, or water; neat:
He drank his whiskey straight.
noun
- the condition of being straight.
- a straight form or position.
- a straight line.
- a straight part, as of a racecourse.
- Informal.
- a heterosexual.
- a person who follows traditional or conventional mores.
- a person who is free from narcotics.
- Chiefly Games. a succession of strokes, plays, etc., which gives a perfect score.
straight
/ streɪt /
adjective
- not curved or crooked; continuing in the same direction without deviating
- straightforward, outright, or candid
a straight rejection
- even, level, or upright in shape or position
- in keeping with the facts; accurate
- honest, respectable, or reliable
- accurate or logical
straight reasoning
- continuous; uninterrupted
- (esp of an alcoholic drink) undiluted; neat
- not crisp, kinked, or curly
straight hair
- correctly arranged; orderly
- (of a play, acting style, etc) straightforward or serious
- journalism (of a story, article, etc) giving the facts without unnecessary embellishment
- sold at a fixed unit price irrespective of the quantity sold
- boxing (of a blow) delivered with an unbent arm
a straight left
- (of the cylinders of an internal-combustion engine) in line, rather than in a V-formation or in some other arrangement
a straight eight
- a slang word for heterosexual
- informal.no longer owing or being owed something
if you buy the next round we'll be straight
- slang.conventional in views, customs, appearance, etc
- slang.not using narcotics; not addicted
adverb
- in a straight line or direct course
- immediately; at once
he came straight back
- in an even, level, or upright position
- without cheating, lying, or unreliability
tell it to me straight
- continuously; uninterruptedly
- without discount regardless of the quantity sold
- often foll by out frankly; candidly
he told me straight out
- go straight informal.to reform after having been dishonest or a criminal
noun
- the state of being straight
- a straight line, form, part, or position
- a straight part of a racetrack US namestraightaway
- poker
- five cards that are in sequence irrespective of suit
- a hand containing such a sequence
- ( as modifier )
a straight flush
- slang.a conventional person
- slang.a heterosexual person
- slang.a cigarette containing only tobacco, without marijuana, etc
Derived Forms
- ˈstraightly, adverb
- ˈstraightness, noun
Other Words From
- straight·ly adverb
- straight·ness noun
- o·ver·straight adjective
- o·ver·straight·ly adverb
- o·ver·straight·ness noun
- su·per·straight adjective
- un·straight adjective
- un·straight·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of straight1
Idioms and Phrases
- go straight, Informal. to live a law-abiding life; no longer engage in crime.
- play it straight, Informal. to do something without jokes, tricks, subterfuge, distortions, or the like:
a comedian who plays it straight when he crusades against drug abuse.
- straight off, without delay; immediately: Also straight away.
I told him straight off what I thought about the matter.
- straight up, (of a cocktail) served without ice:
a gin martini straight up.
More idioms and phrases containing straight
- (straight) from the horse's mouth
- get something straight
- give it to (someone straight)
- go straight
- keep a straight face
- right (straight) out
- set straight
- shoot straight
Example Sentences
Old Dominion won the award for vocal group of the year for a record seventh straight time, surpassing the six previous wins that belonged to Little Big Town.
Flavourless and colourless, methanol is hard to detect in drinks and victims typically don’t see symptoms of poisoning straight away.
Flintoff has returned to the game and gone straight to a high rung on the coaching ladder.
Although she has made lamps, she prefers to focus on affordable goods that can go straight into someone’s home for them to enjoy.
What were you interested in hearing straight from her?
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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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