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write
[ rahyt ]
verb (used with object)
- to trace or form (characters, letters, words, etc.) on the surface of some material, as with a pen, pencil, or other instrument or means; inscribe:
Write your name on the board.
- to express or communicate in writing; give a written account of:
She wrote to thank us for the hospitality.
- to fill in the blank spaces of (a printed form) with writing:
to write a check.
- to execute or produce by setting down words, figures, etc.:
to write two copies of a letter.
- to compose and produce in words or characters duly set down:
to write a letter to a friend.
- to produce as author or composer:
to write a sonnet;
to write a symphony.
- to trace significant characters on, or mark or cover with writing.
- to cause to be apparent or unmistakable:
Honesty is written on his face.
- Computers. to transfer (information, data, programs, etc.) from storage to secondary storage or an output medium.
- Stock Exchange. to sell (options).
- to underwrite.
verb (used without object)
- to trace or form characters, words, etc., with a pen, pencil, or other instrument or means, or as a pen or the like does:
He writes with a pen.
- to write as a profession or occupation:
She writes for the Daily Inquirer.
- to express ideas in writing:
He wrote about his trip to Borneo.
- to write a letter or letters, or communicate by letter:
Write if you get work.
- to compose or work as a writer or author.
- Computers. to transfer into a secondary storage device or output medium.
verb phrase
- to put into writing, especially in full detail:
My boss asked me to write up a report for the meeting on Monday, so I cancelled my plans and worked on it all weekend.
- to present to public notice in a written description or account.
- to document a violation, complaint, or charge against, especially in a recommendation for disciplinary action:
Is it true that you were written up by your French teacher because you set a classroom dictionary on fire?
- Accounting. to make an excessive valuation of (an asset).
- to cancel an entry in an account, as an unpaid and uncollectable debt.
- to regard as worthless, lost, obsolete, etc.; decide to forget:
to write off their bad experience.
- to amortize:
The new equipment was written off in three years.
- to direct one's writing to a less intelligent reader or audience:
He writes down to the public.
- to vote for (a candidate not listed on the ballot) by writing a full name rather than selecting an option on the ballot.
- to include in or add to a text by writing:
Do not write in corrections on the galley.
- to request something by mail:
If interested, please write in for details.
- to put into writing.
- to write in full form; state completely.
- to exhaust the capacity or resources of by excessive writing:
He's just another author who has written himself out.
write
/ raɪt /
verb
- to draw or mark (symbols, words, etc) on a surface, usually paper, with a pen, pencil, or other instrument
- to describe or record (ideas, experiences, etc) in writing
- to compose (a letter) to or correspond regularly with (a person, organization, etc)
- tr; may take a clause as object to say or communicate by letter
he wrote that he was on his way
- informal.tr to send a letter to (a person, etc)
- to write (words) in cursive as opposed to printed style
- tr to be sufficiently familiar with (a specified style, language, etc) to use it in writing
- to be the author or composer of (books, music, etc)
- tr to fill in the details for (a document, form, etc)
- tr to draw up or draft
- tr to produce by writing
he wrote ten pages
- tr to show clearly
envy was written all over his face
- tr to spell, inscribe, or entitle
- tr to ordain or prophesy
it is written
- tr to sit (an examination)
- intr to produce writing as specified
- computing to record (data) in a location in a storage device Compare read 1
- tr Compare underwrite
Derived Forms
- ˈwritable, adjective
Other Words From
- mis·write verb (used with object) miswrote miswritten miswriting
Word History and Origins
Origin of write1
Word History and Origins
Origin of write1
Idioms and Phrases
- nothing to write home about
- wrote
Example Sentences
We’ve been thinking so much about “how many” come to this country, he would write, it’s time to think about “who.”
Inc. provided financial support for Peter Brimelow, a former Forbes journalist, to write “Alien Nation” — a book Tanton helped edit and that would go on to shape the white supremacy movement.
When Taylor would later publish “White Identity,” warning that white people will be marginalized by other races if they do not defend themselves, Tanton would write to him: “You are saying a lot of things that need to be said.”
Keefe was inspired to write the book in 2013, after reading an obituary for Dolours Price, who in her later years spoke about the psychological toll of her I.R.A. activities and accused Adams of ordering attacks she carried out.
While the Heritage Foundation did not write the GOP's platform, the think tank is undoubtedly influential in Republican policymaking.
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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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