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say
1[ sey ]
verb (used with object)
- to utter or pronounce; speak:
What did you say? I said “Hello!”
Say it clearly and simply. It's hard to know how to say this tactfully.
- to state as an opinion or judgment:
I say her plan is the better one.
- to be certain, precise, or assured about; determine:
It is hard to say what is wrong.
- to recite or repeat:
to say one's prayers.
- to report or allege; maintain:
People say he will resign.
- to express (a message, viewpoint, etc.), as through a literary or other artistic medium:
a writer with something to say.
- to indicate or show:
What does your watch say?
- to assume as a hypothesis or estimate:
Let's say, for the sake of argument, that it's true.
verb (used without object)
- to speak; declare; express an opinion.
adverb
It's, say, 14 feet long.
- for example:
If you serve, say tuna fish and potato chips, it will cost much less.
noun
- what a person says or has to say.
- the right or opportunity to speak, decide, or exercise influence:
to have one's say in choosing the candidate.
- a turn to say something:
It is now my say.
interjection
- (used to express surprise, get attention, etc.)
say
2[ sey ]
verb (used with object)
- British Dialect. assay.
say
3[ sey ]
noun
- a thin silk or woolen fabric similar to serge, much used in the 16th century.
Say
4[ sey ]
noun
- Jean Bap·tiste [zhah, n, b, a, -, teest], 1767–1832, French economist. Compare Say's law.
- Thomas, 1787–1834, U.S. entomologist.
say
1/ seɪ /
verb
- to speak, pronounce, or utter
- also intr to express (an idea) in words; tell
we asked his opinion but he refused to say
- also intr; may take a clause as object to state (an opinion, fact, etc) positively; declare; affirm
- to recite
to say grace
- may take a clause as object to report or allege
they say we shall have rain today
- may take a clause as object to take as an assumption; suppose
let us say that he is lying
- may take a clause as object to convey by means of artistic expression
the artist in this painting is saying that we should look for hope
- to make a case for
there is much to be said for either course of action
- usually passive to persuade or coax (someone) to do something
If I hadn't been said by her, I wouldn't be in this fix
- go without sayingto be so obvious as to need no explanation
- I say! informal.an exclamation of surprise
- not to sayeven; and indeed
- that is to sayin other words; more explicitly
- to say nothing ofas well as; even disregarding
he was warmly dressed in a shirt and heavy jumper, to say nothing of a thick overcoat
- to say the leastwithout the slightest exaggeration; at the very least
adverb
- approximately
there were, say, 20 people present
- for example
choose a number, say, four
noun
- the right or chance to speak
let him have his say
- authority, esp to influence a decision
he has a lot of say in the company's policy
- a statement of opinion
you've had your say, now let me have mine
interjection
- informal.an exclamation to attract attention or express surprise, etc
say
2/ seɪ /
noun
- archaic.a type of fine woollen fabric
Derived Forms
- ˈsayer, noun
Other Words From
- sayer noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of say1
Origin of say2
Origin of say3
Word History and Origins
Origin of say1
Origin of say2
Idioms and Phrases
- that is to say. that ( def 16 ).
More idioms and phrases containing say
- before you can say Jack Robinson
- cry (say) uncle
- do as I say
- give (say) the word
- go without (saying)
- have a say in
- I dare say
- I'll say
- needless to say
- never say die
- never say never
- not to mention (say nothing of)
- on one's say-so
- strange to say
- suffice it to say
- that is (to say)
- to say the least
- you can say that again
- you don't say
- said
Example Sentences
"Our findings highlight the importance of minimizing air pollution exposure in pregnant women to protect maternal and fetal health," said co-author Youn Soo Jung, research associate in the Department of Environmental Health.
Their findings, published in Science Advances, were a surprise, Lucore said.
"We stay in the optical domain the whole time, until the end when we want to read out the answer. This enables us to achieve ultra-low latency," Bandyopadhyay says.
He said this has vast implications for everyday electronics, explaining how information encoded in an electron's properties could be transferred without loss, conceivably resulting in lower-power, highly efficient transistors.
"For these infections in dogs and poultry, Enterococcus is acting as E. coli's armorer," Walker says.
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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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