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View synonyms for heave

heave

[ heev ]

verb (used with object)

, heaved or (especially Nautical) hove; heav·ing.
  1. to throw, especially to lift and throw with effort, force, or violence:

    The sailors began heaving the cargo overboard.

    I saw someone heave a brick through the window.

    Synonyms: sling, cast, fling, pitch, hurl

  2. to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist:

    He tried to heave the sledgehammer, but he wasn’t strong enough.

    Synonyms: elevate

  3. to utter laboriously or painfully:

    He heaved a sigh.

  4. to cause to rise and fall with or as if with a swelling motion:

    She stood there weeping, sobs heaving her chest as she covered her face.

  5. to vomit; throw up:

    He heaved his breakfast before noon.

  6. Nautical.
    1. to move into a certain position or situation:

      to heave a vessel aback.

    2. to move in a certain direction:

      Heave the capstan around! Heave up the anchor!

  7. to haul or pull on (a rope, cable, line, etc.) with the hands, a winch, a capstan, or the like:

    Heave the anchor cable!



verb (used without object)

, heaved or (especially Nautical) hove; heav·ing.
  1. to rise and fall in rhythmically alternate movements:

    The ship heaved and rolled in the swelling sea.

  2. to breathe with effort; pant:

    He sat there heaving and puffing from the exertion.

  3. to vomit or retch:

    The smell of the nearby meat processing plant made me heave.

  4. (of the ground, pavement, etc.) to rise as if thrust up; swell or bulge:

    The ground heaved and small fissures appeared for miles around.

    Repeated freezing and thawing will cause the pavement to heave.

    Synonyms: billow, surge

  5. to pull or haul on a rope, cable, etc.:

    We heaved on the rope with all our might, but the log did not budge.

  6. to push, as on a capstan bar.
  7. Nautical.
    1. to move in a certain direction or into a certain position or situation:

      heave about;

      heave alongside;

      heave in stays.

    2. (of a vessel) to rise and fall on high waves, especially waves passing at right angles to the ship.

noun

  1. an act or effort of lifting, pulling, or pushing:

    With one mighty heave they managed to haul the unconscious man into the boat.

  2. a throw, toss, or cast:

    With a great heave, she threw the stone out of the garden bed.

  3. Informal. the act of rejecting or expelling, or the attempt to do so:

    The politician narrowly survived a heave by his own party.

  4. an effortful act of vomiting, retching, coughing, or sighing: Compare dry heaves ( def ).

    With a heave he coughed up the river water in his lungs.

    She turned away and bent over as a heave overcame her.

  5. Geology. the horizontal component of the apparent displacement resulting from a fault, measured in a vertical plane perpendicular to the strike.
  6. the rise and fall of the waves or swell of a sea:

    The ship’s motion is so stable, one doesn’t feel the heave of the ocean.

  7. heaves, (used with a singular verb) Also called broken wind. Veterinary Pathology. a disease of horses, similar to asthma in human beings, characterized by difficult breathing.

verb phrase

    1. Nautical. to stop the headway of (a vessel), especially by bringing the head to the wind and trimming the sails so that they act against one another.
    2. to come to a halt.
  1. Nautical. to careen (a vessel).
  2. Nautical.
    1. to shake loose (a reef taken in a sail).
    2. to loosen (a sail) from its gaskets in order to set it.

heave

/ hiːv /

verb

  1. tr to lift or move with a great effort
  2. tr to throw (something heavy) with effort
  3. to utter (sounds, sighs, etc) or breathe noisily or unhappily

    to heave a sigh

  4. to rise and fall or cause to rise and fall heavily
  5. past tense and past participle hove nautical
    1. to move or cause to move in a specified way, direction, or position

      to heave in sight

    2. intr (of a vessel) to pitch or roll
  6. tr to displace (rock strata, mineral veins, etc) in a horizontal direction
  7. intr to retch
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


noun

  1. the act or an instance of heaving
  2. a fling
  3. the horizontal displacement of rock strata at a fault
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Derived Forms

  • ˈheaver, noun
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Other Words From

  • heav·er noun
  • heave·less adjective
  • un·heaved adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of heave1

First recorded before 900; Middle English heven, variant (with -v- from simple past tense and past participle) of hebben, Old English hebban; cognate with German heben, Old Norse hefja, Gothic hafjan; akin to Latin capere “to take”
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Word History and Origins

Origin of heave1

Old English hebban; related to Old Norse hefja, Old Saxon hebbian, Old High German heffen to raise, Latin capere to take, Sanskrit kapatī two hands full
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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. heave ho, (an exclamation used by sailors, such as when heaving the anchor up.)
  2. heave in sight, to rise to view, such as from below the horizon:

    The ship hove in sight as dawn began to break.

  3. heave the lead. lead 2( def 17 ).
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Synonym Study

See raise.
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Example Sentences

But as Miller Moss dropped back, the Huskies’ front broke through the USC line again, laying chase to the Trojan quarterback, who had to throw up a desperation heave as Washington’s pass rush dragged him to the ground, ending the comeback.

The only way to heave a 16-pound ball more than 70 feet is to generate momentum by spinning your way to the release, which can be especially tricky for very large people trapped inside a seven-foot ring.

“I always wondered how teammates felt about that when they would get the ball with just a couple of seconds left and would have to heave something up at the basket. I thought that was really cool we got to learn what the name was.”

It was wise advice as Jones peppered the boundary with an mouthwatering exhibition of powerful strokeplay – the pick a towering 99-metre heave that flew out of the ground.

From BBC

She was in the final heave of preparation for eight weeks of shows stretching through late November that commemorate “Fumbling Towards Ecstasy,” the sophisticated 1993 album that turned her into an avatar for the sensitive, mysterious singer-songwriters of ’90s radio.

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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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