Advertisement
Advertisement
grounded
[ groun-did ]
adjective
- mentally or emotionally balanced; having a peaceful, practical, or realistic outlook:
His more grounded, common-sense view of the situation was a helpful counter to my flights of fancy.
I love being around them, because they're really grounded.
- Aeronautics. (of an aircraft) being brought or restricted to the ground because of bad weather, the unsatisfactory condition of the aircraft, etc.
Grounded flights have cost airlines in excess of $2 billion this year alone.
- Electricity. having a conducting connection between an electric circuit or equipment and the earth or some other conducting body:
This equipment must be plugged into a grounded outlet.
grounded
/ ˈɡraʊndɪd /
adjective
- sensible and down-to-earth; having one's feet on the ground
Other Words From
- ground·ed·ly adverb
- ground·ed·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of grounded1
Example Sentences
“But when I read the script for Carry-On, I felt like I had found a more grounded version of Die Hard — which was our North Star for the entire process — for a new generation.”
Planes were grounded, construction work halted, and car honking discouraged as the Suneung, an eight-hour university placement exam billed as one of the toughest in the world, kicked off on Thursday.
In an odd twist the photo was first published on Telegram by the former opposition journalist Roman Protasevich, who was arrested when his Ryanair flight over Belarus was forcibly grounded.
For him, "Southern society revived the genius of medieval civilization" and even surpassed it by imposing a racial hierarchy confirmed by ideas grounded in "science."
The ensemble was so grounded that the feeling here was of everyone giving everything they had to hold the symphony — and symbolically the world — together.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse