way

way
[[t]we͟ɪ[/t]]
ways
1) N-COUNT: oft N of -ing, N to-inf If you refer to a way of doing something, you are referring to how you can do it, for example the action you can take or the method you can use to achieve it.

Freezing isn't a bad way of preserving food...

Another way of making new friends is to go to an evening class...

I worked myself into a frenzy plotting ways to make him jealous...

I can't think of a worse way to spend my time...

There just might be a way...

`All right, Mrs Bates,' she said. `We'll do it your way'.

2) N-COUNT: usu sing, usu adj N If you talk about the way someone does something, you are talking about the qualities their action has.

She smiled in a friendly way...

He had a strange way of talking...

I also used to love the smooth way in which the foreigner operated.

3) N-COUNT: with supp, oft in N If a general statement or description is true in a particular way, this is the form of it that is true in a particular case.

Computerized reservation systems help airline profits in several ways...

She was afraid in a way that was quite new to her...

To be female is not a disability; it is just a particular way of being human.

4) N-COUNT: in N with supp You use way in expressions such as in some ways, in many ways, and in every way to indicate the degree or extent to which a statement is true.

In some ways, the official opening is a formality...

She described her lover as `perfect in every way'.

Syn:
5) N-PLURAL: with supp The ways of a particular person or group of people are their customs or their usual behaviour.

He denounces people who urge him to alter his ways...

I think you've been too long in Cornwall. You've forgotten the ways of the city...

He said he was against returning to old authoritarian ways.

6) N-SING: with poss If you refer to someone's way, you are referring to their usual or preferred type of behaviour.

She is now divorced and, in her usual resourceful way, has started her own business...

Direct confrontation was not his way.

7) N-COUNT: with supp You use way to refer to one particular opinion or interpretation of something, when others are possible.

I suppose that's one way of looking at it...

With most of Dylan's lyrics, however, there are other ways of interpreting the words...

Sometimes, the bank manager just doesn't see it your way.

8) N-COUNT: with supp You use way when mentioning one of a number of possible, alternative results or decisions.

There is no indication which way the vote could go...

The judge could have decided either way.

9) N-SING: with supp The way you feel about something is your attitude to it or your opinion about it.

I'm terribly sorry - I had no idea you felt that way.

10) N-SING: the N that If you mention the way that something happens, you are mentioning the fact that it happens.

I hate the way he manipulates people...

You may remember the way each scene ended with someone looking pensive or significant.

11) N-SING: poss N You use way in expressions such as push your way, work your way, or eat your way, followed by a prepositional phrase or adverb, in order to indicate movement, progress, or force as well as the action described by the verb.

She thrust her way into the crowd...

He thought we were trying to buy our way into his company...

Start at the bottom and try to work your way up.

12) N-COUNT: usu the N in sing, oft N to n The way somewhere consists of the different places that you go through or the route that you take in order to get there.

Does anybody know the way to the bathroom?...

I'm afraid I can't remember the way...

We're not even a third of the way there...

We'll go out the back way.

13) N-SING: with supp If you go or look a particular way, you go or look in that direction.

As he strode into the kitchen, he passed Pop coming the other way...

They paused at the top of the stairs, doubtful as to which way to go next...

Could you look this way?

14) N-SING: poss N You can refer to the direction you are travelling in as your way. [SPOKEN]

It's not very far out of his way...

She would say she was going my way and offer me a lift.

15) N-SING: poss N If you lose your way, you take a wrong or unfamiliar route, so that you do not know how to get to the place that you want to go to. If you find your way, you manage to get to the place that you want to go to.

The men lost their way in a sandstorm and crossed the border by mistake...

They've changed a lot of the old street names, and people can't find their way anymore.

16) N-COUNT: poss N You talk about people going their different ways in order to say that their lives develop differently and they have less contact with each other.

It wasn't until we each went our separate ways that I began to learn how to do things for myself...

You go your way and I'll go mine.

17) N-SING: poss N If something comes your way, you get it or receive it.

Take advantage of the opportunities coming your way in a couple of months...

If I run into anything that might interest you, I'll send it your way.

18) N-SING: the/poss N, in/out of N If someone or something is in the way, they prevent you from moving forward or seeing clearly.

`You're standing in the way,' she said. `Would you mind moving aside'...

Get out of my way!

19) N-IN-NAMES: n N Way is used in the names of some roads, and also in the names of some long paths for walkers in the countryside.

Silvertown Way, was that the road?

...the well-trodden 250-mile Pennine Way.

20) N-UNCOUNT: supp N You can use way to refer to the area near where someone lives or near a specified place. [INFORMAL]

If you speak standard English anywhere round our way, people tend to view you with suspicion.

...somebody from Newcastle way.

21) N-SING: with supp You use way in expressions such as the right way up and the other way around to refer to one of two or more possible positions or arrangements that something can have.

The flag was held the wrong way up by some spectators...

It's important to fit it the right way round.

22) ADV: ADV adv/prep (emphasis) You can use way to emphasize, for example, that something is a great distance away or is very much below or above a particular level or amount.

Way down in the valley to the west is the town of Freiburg...

These exam results are way above average...

I have to decide my plan way in advance.

23) N-PLURAL: num N If you split something a number of ways, you divide it into a number of different parts or quantities, usually fairly equal in size.

The region was split three ways, between Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria...

Splitting the price six ways had still cost them each a bundle.

COMB in ADJ: ADJ n
Way is also a combining form.

...a simple three-way division.

24) N-SING: a N, usu supp N Way is used in expressions such as a long way, a little way, and quite a way, to say how far away something is or how far you have travelled.

Some of them live in places quite a long way from here...

A little way further down the lane we passed the driveway to a house...

We've a fair way to go yet.

25) N-SING: a N, usu supp N Way is used in expressions such as a long way, a little way, and quite a way, to say how far away in time something is.

Success is still a long way off...

August is still an awfully long way away.

26) N-SING: predet/quant the N You use way in expressions such as all the way, most of the way and half the way to refer to the extent to which an action has been completed.

He had unscrewed the caps most of the way...

When was the last time you listened to an album all the way through?

27) PHRASE If something is across the way, it is nearby on the opposite side of a road or area. [INFORMAL]

...the big gabled house across the way.

28) PHRASE: usu PHR after v, oft PHR adv/prep (emphasis) You use all the way to emphasize how long a distance is.

He had to walk all the way home...

That dress came all the way from New York.

29) PHRASE: PHR after v (emphasis) You can use all the way to emphasize that your remark applies to every part of a situation, activity, or period of time.

Having started a revolution we must go all the way...

I'll support him all the way.

30) PHRASE: usu PHR with/of n You can use as is the way to say that a particular situation or example of behaviour is typical and you would not expect it to be different.

As is the way with these gatherings, the declarations were largely drafted before the delegations arrived.

31) PHRASE: v-link PHR If you say that someone is in a bad way, you mean that they are very ill or unhealthy. [INFORMAL]

He's in a bad way, but able to talk.

32) PHRASE: PHR after v (emphasis) If you say that something exists, happens, or develops in a big way, you are emphasizing its great extent or importance. [INFORMAL]

The man who took over a few weeks later has also helped further her career in a big way...

Soccer in the States has never taken off in a big way.

33) PHRASE: V inflects If someone says that you can't have it both ways, they are telling you that you have to choose between two things and cannot do or have them both.

Countries cannot have it both ways: the cost of a cleaner environment may sometimes be fewer jobs in dirty industries...

Make up your mind, you can't have it both ways.

34) PHRASE: PHR with cl You say by the way when you add something to what you are saying, especially something that you have just thought of. [SPOKEN]

The name Latifah, by the way, means `delicate'...

By the way, how did your seminar go?

Syn:
35) PHR-PREP: PREP n You use by way of when you are explaining the purpose of something that you have said or are about to say. For example, if you say something by way of an introduction, you say it as an introduction.

By way of contrast, Manchester United will travel slightly more than 1,200 miles...

`I get very superstitious about things like that,' she said by way of explanation.

36) PHR-PREP: PREP n If you do something by way of a particular method, you use that method to do it. [mainly BRIT, WRITTEN]

I teach psychology by way of a range of traditional lectures, practicals and tutorials.

Syn:
by means of
37) PHR-PREP: PREP n If you go somewhere by way of a particular place, you go through that place in order to get to where you want.

The path goes under the river by way of the tunnel.

Syn:
38) PHRASE: V inflects If someone changes their ways or mends their ways, they permanently improve their behaviour or their way of doing something.

What can be done to encourage convicted offenders to change their ways?

Syn:
39) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR for n If you clear the way, open the way, or prepare the way for something, you create an opportunity for it to happen.

The talks are meant to clear the way for formal negotiations on a new constitution...

The decision could open the way for other children to sue their parents.

40) PHRASE: PHR after v, v-link PHR (disapproval) If you say that someone takes the easy way out, you disapprove of them because they do what is easiest for them in a difficult situation, rather than dealing with it properly.

As soon as things got difficult he took the easy way out...

It is the easy way out to blame others for our failure.

41) PHRASE: PHR with cl You use either way in order to introduce a statement which is true in each of the two possible or alternative cases that you have just mentioned.

The sea may rise or the land may fall; either way the sand dunes will be gone in a short time.

42) PHRASE: usu v-link PHR (approval) If you say that a particular type of action or development is the way forward, you approve of it because it is likely to lead to success.

...people who genuinely believe that anarchy is the way forward...

Young players have got to be the way forward for every club.

43) PHRASE: V inflects If someone gets their way or has their way, nobody stops them doing what they want to do. You can also say that someone gets their own way or has their own way .

She is very good at using her charm to get her way.

44) PHRASE: V inflects, PHR n If one thing gives way to another, the first thing is replaced by the second.

First he had been numb. Then the numbness gave way to anger...

The last houses give way to soybean fields.

45) PHRASE: V inflects If an object that is supporting something gives way, it breaks or collapses, so that it can no longer support that thing.

The hook in the ceiling had given way and the lamp had fallen blazing on to the table.

46) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR to n If you give way to someone or something that you have been resisting, you stop resisting and allow yourself to be persuaded or controlled by them. [WRITTEN]

It seems the President has given way to pressure from the hardliners...

He finally gave way to an impulse and pulled her toward him.

Syn:
47) PHRASE: V inflects, oft PHR to n If a moving person, a vehicle, or its driver gives way, they slow down or stop in order to allow other people or vehicles to pass in front of them. [BRIT]

Give way to traffic coming from the left, especially at roundabouts.

(in AM, use yield)
48) PHRASE: V inflects, PHR -ing If you say that someone or something has a way of doing a particular thing, you mean that they often do it.

Bosses have a way of always finding out about such things.

Syn:
have a habit of
49) PHRASE: V inflects, PHR n (approval) If you say that a person has a way with something or someone, you mean that that person seems to have a natural skill or instinct for dealing with them. [mainly SPOKEN]

Constance doesn't have a way with words the way you do...

He seems to have had a way with foreigners.

50) PHRASE (feelings) If you say have it your way or have it your own way, you are telling someone in an annoyed way that you will agree with or accept their suggestion even though you do not think they are right.

All right then, have it your way. Be like that.

51) PHRASE (emphasis) You use in no way or not in any way to emphasize that a statement is not at all true.

In no way am I going to adopt any of his methods...

A spokesman insisted the two events were `in no way related'...

`He hasn't become more boring has he?' she laughs. `No. Not in any way.'

52) PHRASE: PHR with cl (vagueness) If you say that something is true in a way, you mean that although it is not completely true, it is true to a limited extent or in certain respects. You use in a way to reduce the force of a statement.

In a way, I suppose I'm frightened of failing...

It made things very unpleasant in a way.

53) PHRASE: PHR after v, PHR with cl If you say that someone does something in a small way, you mean that although they do not do very much, their actions are useful or important.

...demonstrations against corruption, which began in a small way last week...

By doing this you will, in a small way, help win the victory.

54) PHRASE: V inflects If you say that someone gets in the way or is in the way, you are annoyed because their presence or their actions stop you doing something properly.

`We wouldn't get in the way,' Suzanne promised. `We'd just stand quietly in a corner.'

55) PHRASE: V inflects, oft PHR of n To get in the way of something means to make it difficult for it to happen, continue, or be appreciated properly.

She had a job which never got in the way of her leisure interests.

56) PHRASE: V inflects, PHR n If you know your way around a particular subject, system, or job, or if you know your way about it, you know all the procedures and facts about it.

He knows his way around the intricate maze of European law...

He knows his way about the system better than do most ministers.

57) PHRASE: V inflects If you say that someone is laughing all the way to the bank, you mean that they are making a lot of money very easily. [INFORMAL]

The lucrative contract with television means that England's wealthy football clubs will now be laughing all the way to the bank.

58) PHRASE: V inflects If you lead the way along a particular route, you go along it in front of someone in order to show them where to go.

She grabbed his suitcase and led the way.

59) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR in -ing/n If a person or group leads the way in a particular activity, they are the first person or group to do it or they make the most new developments in it.

Sony has also led the way in shrinking the size of compact-disc players.

60) PHRASE: have inflects, oft PHR since n If you say that someone or something has come a long way, you mean that they have developed, progressed, or become very successful.

He has come a long way since the days he could only afford one meal a day.

61) PHRASE: PHR with cl, compar/superl PHR (emphasis) You can use by a long way to emphasize that something is, for example, much better, worse, or bigger than any other thing of that kind.

It was, by a long way, the worst meeting I have ever attended...

Our favourite by a long way was the supermarkets' own brand.

Syn:
62) PHRASE: v-link PHR n/-ing (emphasis) If you say that something is a long way from being true, you are emphasizing that it is definitely not true.

She is a long way from being the richest person in Britain...

That's a long way from the truth.

Syn:
far from
63) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR towards/to -ing/n If you say that something goes a long way towards doing a particular thing, you mean that it is an important factor in achieving that thing.

Although by no means a cure, it goes a long way towards making the patient's life more tolerable.

64) PHRASE: V inflects (disapproval) If you say that someone has lost their way, you are criticizing them because they do not have any good ideas any more, or seem to have become unsure about what to do.

Why has the White House lost its way on tax and budget policy?

65) PHRASE: V inflects, PHR prep/adv When you make your way somewhere, you walk or travel there.

He made his way to the marketplace, as he had been instructed to do...

He made his way home at last.

66) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR for n If one person or thing makes way for another, the first is replaced by the second.

He said he was prepared to make way for younger people in the party...

A number of houses would have to be demolished to make way for the new building.

67) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR that (emphasis) If you say there's no way that something will happen, you are emphasizing that you think it will definitely not happen.

There was absolutely no way that we were going to be able to retrieve it.

68) PHRASE (emphasis) You can say no way as an emphatic way of saying no. [INFORMAL]

Mike, no way am I playing cards with you for money...

That was not the life Jack Hewitt planned to live. No way!

69) PHRASE: PHR n, usu amount/n PHR n You use in the way of or by way of in order to specify the kind of thing you are talking about.

Latvia is a country without much in the way of natural resources...

Meetings held today produced little in the way of an agreement...

The man with whom she maintains a relationship provides nothing by way of support.

Syn:
as regards
70) PHRASE: V inflects, oft PHR prep/adv If you are on your way, you have started your journey somewhere.

He has been allowed to leave the country and is on his way to Britain...

By sunrise tomorrow we'll be on our way.

71) PHRASE: V inflects If you go on your way, you continue with your journey.

She picked up her bag, and went on her way.

72) PHRASE If something happens on the way or along the way, it happens during the course of a particular event or process.

You may have to learn a few new skills along the way.

73) PHRASE: usu v-link PHR to n/-ing If you are on your way or well on your way to something, you have made so much progress that you are almost certain to achieve that thing.

I am now out of hospital and well on the way to recovery.

74) PHRASE: v-link PHR, with/have n PHR If something is on the way, it will arrive soon.

The forecasters say more snow is on the way...

She is married with twin sons and a third child on the way.

75) PHRASE: PHR after v, PHR with cl (vagueness) You can use one way or another or one way or the other when you want to say that something definitely happens, but without giving any details about how it happens.

...those who had entered Germany one way or another during the war...

You know pretty well everyone here, one way or the other.

76) PHRASE: PHR after v You use one way or the other or one way or another to refer to two possible decisions or conclusions that have previously been mentioned, without stating which one is reached or preferred.

We've got to make our decision one way or the other...

I didn't really care one way or another.

77) PHRASE: PHR with cl You say in more ways than one to indicate that what you have said is intended to have more than one meaning.

These local elections may prove a turning point in more ways than one.

78) PHRASE You use the other way around or the other way round to refer to the opposite of what you have just said.

You'd think you were the one who did me the favor, and not the other way around.

79) PHRASE: usu v-link PHR If something or someone is on the way out or on their way out, they are likely to disappear or to be replaced very soon.

There are encouraging signs that cold war attitudes are on the way out...

The ban on Sunday shopping could be on its way out before Christmas...

He is rumoured to be on the way out of professional cycling following a disastrous season.

80) PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR to-inf If you go out of your way to do something, for example to help someone, you make a special effort to do it.

He was very kind to me and seemed to go out of his way to help me.

81) PHRASE: V inflects If you keep out of someone's way or stay out of their way, you avoid them or do not get involved with them.

I'd kept out of his way as much as I could...

He warned the army to stay out of the way of the relief effort.

82) PHRASE: v-link PHR, PHR after v When something is out of the way, it has finished or you have dealt with it, so that it is no longer a problem or needs no more time spent on it.

The plan has to remain confidential at least until the local elections are out of the way...

It would have been better to have got it out of the way earlier.

Syn:
over with
83) PHRASE: V inflects If you go your own way, you do what you want rather than what everyone else does or expects.

In school I was a loner. I went my own way.

84) PHRASE: PHR with cl You use in the same way to introduce a situation that you are comparing with one that you have just mentioned, because there is a strong similarity between them.

There is no reason why a gifted aircraft designer should also be a capable pilot. In the same way, a brilliant pilot can be a menace behind the wheel of a car.

Syn:
85) PHRASE: v-link PHR If you say that someone is set in their ways, you mean that they have been behaving in the same way for many years and do not want to change.

He was too set in his ways to make any real changes.

86) PHRASE: PHR after v, adj PHR You can use that way and this way to refer to a statement or comment that you have just made.

Some of us have habits few people know about and we keep it this way...

We have a beautiful city and we pray it stays that way...

I've never found it hard to make friends so I suppose I was lucky that way.

Syn:
like that, like this
87) PHRASE: PHR with cl You can use that way or this way to refer to an action or situation that you have just mentioned, when you go on to mention the likely consequence or effect of it.

Keep the soil moist. That way, the seedling will flourish...

I know it's unfair that I am left holding the baby; but at least this way I know that she's being well looked after.

88) PHRASE: be inflects, PHR with cl You can use the way things are going to indicate that you expect something to happen because of the way the present situation is developing.

The way things are going, perhaps he won't come at all.

89) PHRASE: PHR with cl You add to my way of thinking to a statement in order to indicate that you are giving your opinion.

To my way of thinking, it didn't seem as if it ought to be so terribly complicated.

90) PHRASE: usu v-link PHR (emphasis) If you say that there are no two ways about it, you are emphasizing that there is no doubt at all about a particular situation or about how it should be interpreted. [SPOKEN]

You stay here, you die. No two ways about it.

91) PHRASE: usu v-link PHR If an activity or plan is under way, it has begun and is now taking place.

A full-scale security operation is now under way...

The court case got under way last autumn.

92) PHRASE: PHR after v, oft PHR cl (emphasis) Every which way and any which way are used to emphasize that something happens, or might happen, in a lot of different ways, or using a lot of different methods. [AM; also BRIT, INFORMAL]

He re-ran the experiment every which way he could...

They are just happy to sell their inventory any which way they can.

93) PHRASE: PHR after v (emphasis) Every which way is used to emphasize that things move in a lot of different directions or are arranged in a lot of different positions. [AM; also BRIT, INFORMAL]

...cars parked every which way.

94) to see the error of your wayssee error
to look the other waysee look

English dictionary. 2008.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?
Synonyms:

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  • Way — Way, n. [OE. wey, way, AS. weg; akin to OS., D., OHG., & G. weg, Icel. vegr, Sw. v[ a]g, Dan. vei, Goth. wigs, L. via, and AS. wegan to move, L. vehere to carry, Skr. vah. [root]136. Cf. {Convex}, {Inveigh}, {Vehicle}, {Vex}, {Via}, {Voyage},… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • way — or go one s way [wā] n. [ME < OE weg, akin to Ger < IE base * weĝh , to go > L vehere, to carry, ride, Gr ochos, wagon] 1. a means of passing from one place to another, as a road, highway, street or path [the Appian Way] 2. room or space …   English World dictionary

  • way — ► NOUN 1) a method, style, or manner of doing something. 2) the typical manner in which someone behaves or in which something happens. 3) a road, track, path, or street. 4) a route or means taken in order to reach, enter, or leave a place. 5) the …   English terms dictionary

  • way — way; way·bread; way·far·er; way·far·ing; way·goose; way·less; way·man; way·ment; way·ward; way·ward·ly; way·ward·ness; way·wis·er; way·wode; hem·ing·way·esque; Jet·way; bus·way; cause·way; mid·way; sub·way; way·fare; well·a·way; hatch·way·man;… …   English syllables

  • Way — can refer to: * a road or path(way) * wayob , plural form (singular way ), spirit companions appearing in mythology and folklore of Maya peoples of the Yucatan Peninsula * A precisely straight rail or track on a machine tool (such as that on the… …   Wikipedia

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  • way — n 1 Way, route, course, passage, pass, artery mean, in common, a track or path traversed in going from one place to another. Way is general and inclusive of any track or path; it can specifically signify a thoroughfare especially in combinations… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • way — I (channel) noun alley, artery, avenue, custom, direction, lane, mode, path, pathway, plan, road, roadway, route, throughway II (manner) noun behavior, fashion, habit, means, progression, ritual associated concepts: way appurtenant, way by… …   Law dictionary

  • way — (n.) O.E. weg road, path, course of travel, from P.Gmc. *wegaz (Cf. O.S., Du. weg, O.N. vegr, O.Fris. wei, O.H.G. weg, Ger. Weg, Goth. wigs way ), from PIE *wegh to move (see WEIGH (Cf …   Etymology dictionary

  • Way — Way, adv. [Aphetic form of away.] Away. [Obs. or Archaic] Chaucer. [1913 Webster] {To do way}, to take away; to remove. [Obs.] Do way your hands. Chaucer. {To make way with}, to make away with. See under {Away}. [Archaic] [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • WAY-FM — may refer to:* WAY FM Network, a national, non profit radio broadcasting network in the United States that primarily plays Contemporary Christian music ** WAYM, the Franklin, Tennessee based flagship station of the WAY FM Network that goes by the …   Wikipedia

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