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sweep
1[ sweep ]
verb (used with object)
- to move or remove (dust, dirt, etc.) with or as if with a broom, brush, or the like.
- to clear or clean (a floor, room, chimney, etc.) of dirt, litter, or the like, by means of a broom or brush.
- to drive or carry by some steady force, as of a wind or wave:
The wind swept the snow into drifts.
- to pass or draw (something) over a surface with a continuous stroke or movement:
The painter swept a brush over his canvas.
- to make (a path, opening, etc.) by clearing a space with or as if with a broom.
- to clear (a surface, place, etc.) of something on or in it (often followed by of ):
to sweep a sea of enemy ships.
- to pass over (a surface, region, etc.) with a steady, driving movement or unimpeded course, as winds, floods, etc.:
sandstorms sweeping the plains.
- to search (an area or building) thoroughly:
Soldiers swept the town, looking for deserters.
- to pass the gaze, eyes, etc., over (a region, area, etc.):
His eyes swept the countryside.
- to direct (the eyes, gaze, etc.) over a region, surface, or the like:
He swept his eyes over the countryside.
- to examine electronically, as to search for a hidden listening device.
- to win a complete or overwhelming victory in (a contest):
Johnson swept the presidential election of 1964.
- to win (every game, round, hand, etc., of a series of contests):
The Yankees swept the three-game series.
- Music.
- to pass the fingers or bow over (a musical instrument, its strings or keys, etc.), as in playing.
- to bring forth (music) thus.
verb (used without object)
- to sweep a floor, room, etc., with or as if with a broom:
The new broom sweeps well.
- to move steadily and strongly or swiftly (usually followed by along, down, by, into, etc.).
- to move or pass in a swift but stately manner:
Proudly, she swept from the room.
- to move, pass, or extend in a continuous course, especially a wide curve or circuit:
His glance swept around the room.
- to conduct an underwater search by towing a drag under the surface of the water.
- Aeronautics. (of an airfoil or its leading or trailing edge) to project from the fuselage at an angle rearward or forward of a line perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the aircraft.
noun
- the act of sweeping, especially a moving, removing, clearing, etc., by or as if by the use of a broom:
to give the house a good sweep.
- the steady, driving motion or swift onward course of something moving with force or without interruption:
the sweep of the wind and the waves.
- an examination by electronic detection devices of a room or building to determine the presence of hidden listening devices.
- a swinging or curving movement or stroke, as of the arm, a weapon, an oar, etc.
- reach, range, or compass, as of something sweeping about:
the sweep of a road about a marsh.
- a continuous extent or stretch:
a broad sweep of sand.
- a curving, especially widely or gently curving, line, form, part, or mass.
- matter removed or gathered by sweeping.
- Also called well sweep. a leverlike device for raising or lowering a bucket in a well.
- a large oar used in small vessels, sometimes to assist the rudder or to propel the craft.
- an overwhelming victory in a contest.
- a winning of all the games, rounds, hands, prizes, etc., in a contest by one contestant.
- Football. end run ( def 1 ).
- one of the sails of a windmill.
- Agriculture. any of the detachable triangular blades on a cultivator.
- Chiefly British. a person employed to clean by sweeping, especially a chimney sweeper.
- Cards.
- Whist. the winning of all the tricks in a hand. Compare slam 2( def 1 ).
- Casino. a pairing or combining, and hence taking, of all the cards on the board.
- Physics. an irreversible process tending towards thermal equilibrium.
sweep
2[ sweep ]
noun
- a sweepstakes.
sweep
/ swiːp /
verb
- to clean or clear (a space, chimney, etc) with a brush, broom, etc
- often foll by up to remove or collect (dirt, rubbish, etc) with a brush, broom, etc
- to move in a smooth or continuous manner, esp quickly or forcibly
cars swept along the road
- to move in a proud or dignified fashion
she swept past
- to spread or pass rapidly across, through, or along (a region, area, etc)
the news swept through the town
- tr to direct (the gaze, line of fire, etc) over; survey
- tr; foll by away or off to overwhelm emotionally
she was swept away by his charm
- tr to brush or lightly touch (a surface, etc)
the dress swept along the ground
- troften foll byaway to convey, clear, or abolish, esp with strong or continuous movements
secondary modern schools were swept away
the sea swept the sandcastle away
- intr to extend gracefully or majestically, esp in a wide circle
the plains sweep down to the sea
- to search (a body of water) for mines, etc, by dragging
- to search (a room, area, etc) electronically to detect spying devices
- tr to win overwhelmingly, esp in an election
Labour swept the country
- cricket to play (a ball) with a sweep
- tr to propel (a boat) with sweeps
- sweep something under the carpet or sweep something under the rugto conceal (something, esp a problem) in the hope that it will be overlooked by others
- sweep the board
- (in gambling) to win all the cards or money
- to win every event or prize in a contest
noun
- the act or an instance of sweeping; removal by or as if by a brush or broom
- a swift or steady movement, esp in an arc
with a sweep of his arms
- the distance, arc, etc, through which something, such as a pendulum, moves
- a wide expanse or scope
the sweep of the plains
- any curving line or contour
- cards
- the winning of every trick in a hand of whist
- the taking, by pairing, of all exposed cards in cassino
- short for sweepstake
- cricket a shot in which the ball is hit more or less square on the leg side from a half-kneeling position with the bat held nearly horizontal
- a long oar used on an open boat
- a person steering a surf boat with such an oar
- any of the sails of a windmill
- electronics a steady horizontal or circular movement of an electron beam across or around the fluorescent screen of a cathode-ray tube
- agriculture
- a rakelike attachment for the front of a motor vehicle for pushing hay into piles
- a triangular blade on a cultivator used to cut through roots below the surface of the soil
- a curving driveway
- See chimney sweep
- another name for swipe
- clean sweep
- an overwhelming victory or success
- a complete change; purge
to make a clean sweep
Derived Forms
- ˈsweepy, adjective
Other Words From
- sweepa·ble adjective
- un·sweepa·ble adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of sweep1
Origin of sweep2
Word History and Origins
Origin of sweep1
Idioms and Phrases
- make a clean sweep
- new broom sweeps clean
- (sweep) off someone's feet
Example Sentences
But would Republicans, who just saw their leader sweep every battleground state and narrowly win the popular vote, be willing to derail a second Trump presidency — and invite his rage — by actually denying him one of his most important cabinet picks?
Asked in the same October interview how deportations would be carried out, Homan said: "It's not gonna be a mass sweep of neighbourhoods. It's not gonna be building concentration camps. I've read it all. It's ridiculous."
“It’s not going to be a mass sweep of neighborhoods. It’s not going to be building concentration camps,” Tom Homan, a former acting director of ICE under Trump, said last month on CBS’ “60 Minutes.”
Take a quick sweep of dating-related videos on TikTok, and if it’s not daters sharing their horror stories, it’s a myriad of tips to bypass the dating-app paywalls.
Her failure to clearly distinguish herself from the president's policies and establish herself as a harbinger of change, all but set up Trump's likely sweep of the national popular vote.
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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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