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View synonyms for piece

piece

[ pees ]

noun

  1. a separate or limited portion or quantity of something:

    a piece of land;

    a piece of chocolate.

    Synonyms: fragment, scrap, segment, section

    Antonyms: whole

  2. a quantity of some substance or material forming a single mass or body:

    a nice piece of lumber.

  3. a more or less definite portion or quantity of a whole:

    to cut a blueberry pie into six pieces.

  4. a particular length, as of certain goods prepared for the market:

    cloth sold by the piece.

  5. an amount of work forming a single job:

    to be paid by the piece and not by the hour.

  6. an example of workmanship, especially of artistic production, as a picture or a statue:

    The museum has some interesting pieces by Picasso.

  7. a literary or journalistic composition, usually short, in prose or verse.
  8. a literary selection for recitation:

    Each child had a chance to recite a piece.

  9. a musical composition.
  10. one of the parts that, when assembled, form a whole:

    the pieces of a clock.

  11. an individual article of a set or collection:

    a set of dishes containing 100 pieces.

  12. Games.
    1. one of the figures, disks, blocks, or the like, of wood, plastic, ivory, or other material, used in playing a board game.
    2. (in chess) a king, queen, bishop, knight, or rook; a superior man or figure, as distinguished from a pawn:

      One of the opening principles in chess is piece development.

  13. a token, charm, or amulet:

    a good-luck piece.

  14. an individual thing of a particular class or kind:

    a piece of furniture;

    a piece of drawing paper.

  15. an example, specimen, or instance of something:

    a fine piece of workmanship.

  16. one of the parts into which a thing is destructively divided or broken; a part, fragment, or shred:

    to tear a letter into pieces.

  17. Informal.
    1. a rifle, pistol, or other small firearm.
    2. a cannon or other unit of ordnance:

      Each field piece was drawn by six horses.

  18. a coin:

    a five-cent piece.

  19. Midland and Southern U.S. a distance:

    I'm going down the road a piece.

  20. Chiefly North Midland U.S. a snack.
  21. Also called piece of ass. Slang: Vulgar.
    1. Usually Disparaging and Offensive. a person, usually a woman, considered as a sexual partner.
    2. sexual intercourse:

      He's always looking for piece of ass.



verb (used with object)

, pieced, piec·ing.
  1. to mend (a garment, article, etc.) by adding, joining, or applying a piece or pieces; patch.
  2. to complete, enlarge, or extend by an added piece or something additional (often followed by out ):

    to piece out a library with new books.

  3. to make by or as if by joining pieces (often followed by together ):

    to piece a quilt;

    to piece together a musical program.

  4. to join together, as pieces or parts:

    to piece together the fragments of a broken dish.

  5. to join as a piece or addition to something:

    to piece new wire into the cable.

  6. to assemble into a meaningful whole by combining available facts, information, details, etc.:

    He pieced the story together after a lot of effort.

verb (used without object)

, pieced, piec·ing.
  1. Chiefly North Midland U.S. to eat small portions of food between meals; snack.

piece

/ piːs /

noun

  1. an amount or portion forming a separate mass or structure; bit

    a piece of wood

  2. a small part, item, or amount forming part of a whole, esp when broken off or separated

    a piece of bread

  3. a length by which a commodity is sold, esp cloth, wallpaper, etc
  4. an instance or occurrence

    a piece of luck

  5. slang.
    a girl or woman regarded as an object of sexual attraction

    a nice piece

  6. an example or specimen of a style or type, such as an article of furniture

    a beautiful piece of Dresden china

  7. informal.
    an opinion or point of view

    to state one's piece

  8. a literary, musical, or artistic composition
  9. a coin having a value as specified

    fifty-pence piece

  10. a small object, often individually shaped and designed, used in playing certain games, esp board games

    chess pieces

    1. a firearm or cannon
    2. ( in combination )

      fowling-piece

  11. any chessman other than a pawn
  12. a short time or distance

    down the road a piece

  13. dialect.
    1. a slice of bread or a sandwich
    2. a packed lunch taken to work, school, etc
  14. usually plural fragments of fleece wool See also oddment
  15. give someone a piece of one's mind informal.
    to criticize or censure someone frankly or vehemently
  16. go to pieces
    1. (of a person) to lose control of oneself; have a breakdown
    2. (of a building, organization, etc) to disintegrate
  17. nasty piece of work informal.
    a cruel or mean person
  18. of a piece
    of the same kind; alike
  19. piece of cake informal.
    something easily obtained or achieved
“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


verb

  1. often foll by together to fit or assemble piece by piece
  2. often foll by up to patch or make up (a garment) by adding pieces
  3. textiles to join (broken threads) during spinning
“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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Sensitive Note

The meanings “sexual intercourse” and “sexual partner” are both vulgar slang. When referring to a person, the term piece is usually used with disparaging intent and perceived as insulting.
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Other Words From

  • mul·ti·piece adjective
  • un·pieced adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of piece1

First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English pece, pes(e), pesse, from Old French, from unattested Gaulish pettia; akin to Breton pez “piece,” Welsh, Cornish peth “thing”
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Word History and Origins

Origin of piece1

C13 pece, from Old French, of Gaulish origin; compare Breton pez piece, Welsh peth portion
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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. go to pieces,
    1. to break into fragments.
    2. to lose control of oneself; become emotionally or physically upset:

      When he flunked out of medical school he went to pieces.

  2. of a piece, of the same kind; harmonious; consistent. Also of one piece.
  3. piece of work, an extraordinary person, especially one who has extremely negative qualities:

    She's a nasty piece of work!

  4. speak one's piece, to express one's opinion; reveal one's thoughts upon a subject:

    I decided to speak my piece whether they liked it or not.

  5. give someone a piece of one's mind. mind ( def 39 ).
  6. piece of the action. action ( def 23 ).

More idioms and phrases containing piece

  • all in one piece
  • conversation piece
  • go to pieces
  • museum piece
  • of a piece
  • pick apart (to pieces)
  • pick up the pieces
  • puff piece
  • say one's piece
  • think piece
  • thrill to pieces
  • to pieces
  • villain of the piece
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Synonym Study

See part.
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Example Sentences

“We’ve invested more than 20 years in understanding the natural history of this fascinating species of nudibranch. Our discovery is a new piece of the puzzle that can help better understand the largest habitat on Earth.”

This type of period piece can often feel artificial, even or especially on a big budget.

"This might be just one fossil, but it’s a key piece in the puzzle of bird brain evolution," he said.

From BBC

The Georgian piece contains about 500 diamonds and was bought for almost double the amount estimated by Sotheby's auction house.

From BBC

"It's like the penny was dropping, the expectation is that you’re there for a job, and actually you’re just there as a potential piece of meat."

From BBC

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Related Words

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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