| 单词 | wide | 
| 释义 | widen. a.  Width, breadth. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > breadth or width > 			[noun]		 bredeeOE widenessOE wideOE latitude1398 broada1400 broadnessa1425 largeness?a1425 breadth1459 width1570 largitude1590 cross1630 OE    tr.  Wonders of East 		(Tiber.)	 §18. 194  				Heora wide [OE Vitell. widnes] is  cc mila ðæs læssan getales þe stadia hatte & ðæs maran ðe leuua hatte  cxxxiii & an healf mil. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 1676  				A schippe be-houes þe to dight,..Seuen score ellen lang and ten, Thrys aght on wyde, on heght fiueten. c1450						 (a1425)						    Metrical Paraphr. Old Test. 		(Selden)	 l. 9959 (MED)  				In all þe werldes wyde of his wytt went þe fame.  b.   on (length and) wide: throughout the whole area, far and wide; widely, broadly. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > here, there, etc. > 			[adverb]		 > everywhere > on all sides or all around on (length and) widec1300 round aboutc1350 about rounda1393 rounda1393 far-abouta1400 c1300    Life & Martyrdom Thomas Becket 		(Harl. 2277)	 		(1845)	 l. 1180  				Holi churche he aboute dure, that me tiȝth on wide [c1300 Laud tellez of wel wide, a1325 Corpus Cambr. telleþ of wide]. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 1646  				Couetys, hordan, envie, and pride Has spred þis werld on lenth and wide. c1400						 (?c1380)						    Cleanness 		(1920)	 l. 1423 (MED)  				He waytez on wyde, his wenches he byholdes. c1450						 (?a1370)						    Wynnere & Wastoure 		(1990)	 213 (MED)  				The Kynge waytted one wyde and the wyne askes. 1565    T. Peend tr.  M. Bandello Moste Notable Hist. Ld. Mandosse sig. H.iiiv  				O ground gape thou on wyde, my..soule receaue. ΚΠ c1330						 (?a1300)						    Sir Tristrem 		(1886)	 l. 1013  				Þai seylden in to þe wide.  3.  Cricket. A delivery judged to have been bowled too wide for the batter to hit from where he or she stands to receive the ball and from a normal guard position, for which a run is awarded to the batting side; the run awarded for such a delivery. Cf. slightly earlier wide ball at wide adj. 11b.A wide does not count as one of the balls in an over. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > bowling > 			[noun]		 > a ball bowled > types of delivery or ball full toss1826 long hop1830 twister1832 bail ball1833 bailer1833 grubber1837 slow ball1838 wide1838 ground ball1839 shooter1843 slower ball1846 twiddler1847 creeper1848 lob1851 sneak1851 sneaker1851 slow1854 bumper1855 teaser1856 daisy-cutter1857 popper1857 yorker1861 sharpshooter1863 headball1866 screwball1866 underhand1866 skimmerc1868 grub1870 ramrod1870 raymonder1870 round-armer1871 grass cutter1876 short pitch1877 leg break1878 lob ball1880 off-break1883 donkey-drop1888 tice1888 fast break1889 leg-breaker1892 kicker1894 spinner1895 wrong 'un1897 googly1903 fizzer1904 dolly1906 short ball1911 wrong 'un1911 bosie1912 bouncer1913 flyer1913 percher1913 finger-spinner1920 inswinger1920 outswinger1920 swinger1920 off-spinner1924 away swinger1925 Chinaman1929 overspinner1930 tweaker1938 riser1944 leg-cutter1949 seamer1952 leggy1954 off-cutter1955 squatter1955 flipper1959 lifter1959 cutter1960 beamer1961 loosener1962 doosra1999 1828    Hampshire Chron. 8 Sept.  				2d Innings..Byes 3, wide 1.]			 1838    Leeds Times 4 Aug. 5/4  				Cobough..Wides, byes, and no balls 3. 1850    ‘Bat’ Cricketer's Man. 		(rev. ed.)	 46  				Rule the [scoring] sheet..with three additional [lines] for wides, byes, and no-balls. 1880    London Evening Standard 18 May 6/7  				Shaw..tried his slows, and began with three wides. 1930    L. Charteris Enter Saint 		(1992)	 81  				He was always ready to make his duck or bowl his wides in any cricket game that happened to be going. 1987    Wisden Cricket Monthly Aug. 2/1  				If the scores are level at the end of the match and a ‘no-ball’ or ‘wide’ is called, the batting side has won. 2007    Wisden Cricketer July 42/4  				They bowled so many bouncers and wides and we just couldn't hit 'em.  4.  Phonetics. A wide vowel. Cf. wide adj. 7b. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > study of speech sound > speech sound > vowel > 			[noun]		 > types of naso-vocal1669 sheva1818 union vowel1821 shut sound1841 cardinal vowel1851 u-sound1852 neutral vowel1868 O1869 wide1870 vincular1871 indeterminate vowel1873 u-vowel1886 orinasal1887 pharyngal1887 glide-vowel1888 schwa1895 murmur vowel1910 murmured vowel1933 1870    Trans. Philol. Soc. 107/2  				None certainly distinguish the six sounds formed by the ‘primaries’ and ‘wides’ of any series. 1877    H. Sweet Handbk. Phonetics §45  				The narrow back unrounded vowels are indicated by the ‘turned’ letters of the corresponding wides..(ɔ) is assumed to be a turned (o). 1881    H. Sweet in  Trans. Philol. Soc. 232  				The wides must be old in South German, for in some of the Swiss dialects their lengthenings are still wide. 1966    Maal og Minne Oct. 49  				In the case of the back vowels the wides are higher than the narrows.  5.  colloquial.  to the wide: to the extreme; entirely, utterly. Esp. in  blind (dead, done, out, etc.) to the wide: worn out, done-for; defeated; incapacitated; unconscious. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > greatly or very much			[phrase]		 > utter > utterly all outc1300 out and outc1300 at all devicec1385 to devicec1385 right out?1543 up to the chin1546 up to the eyes1607 upsy Friese1609 up to the (or one's) eyebrowsa1627 all hollow1762 (immersed, steeped) to the lipsa1822 all ends up1850 fair and square1870 right spang1884 to the wide1895 a (also one) hundred per cent1911 1895    Ballarat 		(Victoria)	 Star 10 Jan.  				They are wrecked and disastered—‘broke to the wide’—as the turf's classic phrase is. 1905    J. Meredith Learn to talk Old Jack Lang 		(1984)	 12  				I rambled over to the rubbity dub and had a pint of oh my dear. In fact I had several and finished up in the dead house, broke to the wide. 1910    Sydney Sportsman 29 June 6/6  				For when once he's asleep he is dead to the ‘wide’. 1915    G. Frankau Tid'apa iii. 19  				‘Blind, blind to the wide.’ It was shaky, his hand on the dipper-bar, As the water slopped over, gurgling, from its Ali-baba jar. 1925    E. Fraser  & J. Gibbons Soldier & Sailor Words (at cited word)  				Done to the wide, utterly beaten. 1929    W. J. Locke Jorico 46  				‘You're broke’... ‘To the wide,’ said Nicholas. 1958    F. C. Avis Boxing Ref. Dict. 		(U.S. ed.)	 96  				Out to the wide, completely unconscious. 1959    L. Lee Cider with Rosie 90  				Wake up, lamb... He's wacked to the wide. Let's try and carry him up. 1963    M. Duggan in  C. K. Stead N.Z. Short Stories 		(1966)	 2nd Ser. 97  				Honest, simple and broke to the wide. 2012    K. Samachai Incubus 165  				You know nothing would give me more pleasure than giving you the money, problem is I'm broke to the wide and so is everyone else I know on this farm.  6.  Anything that is wide, sometimes contrasted with a corresponding thing that is narrow; esp. a wide or open space or region.Quot. 1842   probably shows a postpositive use of the adjective, echoing the following use by Milton: 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  x. 283  				The waste Wide Anarchie of Chaos. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > sea or ocean > 			[noun]		 > ocean, open sea, or deep sea room seaeOE seawaya1000 the deepc1000 deptha1382 oceana1387 mid-sea?a1425 profound?a1425 main seaa1530 high seas1566 main1579 main flood1596 the deep1598 deep sea1626 dipsey1626 mid-ocean1697 blue water1803 haaf1809 salt chuck1868 wide1916 the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > largeness > 			[noun]		 > vast extent > that which is latitude?a1475 sea1585 ocean1590 vasture1596 vast1604 vastity1652 vastness1674 immense1791 breadths1839 vastitude1841 Atlantic1865 wide1916 1842    Ld. Tennyson Two Voices in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 II. 124  				The waste wide Of that abyss.]			 1916    E. Blunden Silver Bird of Herndyke Mill sig. D4  				There seems no heart in wood or wide. 1957    J. Kerouac On the Road 255  				Kansas night-cows in the secret wides. 1987    Coarse Angler Feb. 37/1  				These canal ‘wides’ are noted hotspots for all species of fish. 2006    Running Times Sept. 36/1  				As with many New Balance shoes.., both narrows and wides are available in all lengths. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022). wideadj.α. Old English widdra, Middle English widdir, Middle English widdur, Middle English wyddur, Middle English wyddyre, Middle English–1500s wydder, Middle English–1600s widder. β. late Middle English widere, late Middle English wijdir, late Middle English– wider; Scottish pre-1700 waider, pre-1700 woidar, pre-1700 wyder. Superlativeα. Middle English widdest. β. Middle English– widest, 1600s widst (poetic).  I.  Having great extent; extensive.  1.   a.   (a) Having great spatial extent, esp. horizontally; vast, extensive, spacious, ample. In later use chiefly as a conventional epithet of words denoting an extensive area, esp. the earth or the sea (often poetic and rhetorical).Some later examples may be regarded as generalized uses of sense  5.wide open spaces: see wide (also great, vast) open spaces at open space n. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > largeness > 			[adjective]		 > of vast extent broadOE sideOE wideOE largec1230 spaciousa1382 unridea1425 amplea1492 well-spreadc1540 main1548 overreaching1579 widespread1582 spacious1587 wide-spreading1587 scopeful1598 vasty1598 scopious1599 vast1600 worldwide1602 spaceful1621 dimensious1632 voluminousa1661 extensive1706 sheety1748 sweeping1772 extended1779 expansive1806 wide-spreaded1820 heaven-wide1835 spanless1847 rangy1898 the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > breadth or width > 			[adjective]		 > having great breadth or width broadOE wideOE largec1300 straight?a1366 spacious1506 basin-wide1591 late1597 broad-backed1651 the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > largeness > 			[adjective]		 > of vast extent > conventionally wideOE OE    Cynewulf Juliana 9  				Wæs his rice brad, wid ond weorðlic ofer werþeode, lytesna ofer ealne yrmenne grund. OE    Genesis A 		(1931)	 104  				Ac þes wida grund stod deop and dim. a1250						 (?c1200)						    Sawles Warde 		(Titus)	 		(1938)	 11 (MED)  				Helle is wid wiðute met & deop wiðute grunde. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 58  				Eneas þe duc mid his driht-folcke. widen iwalken. ȝend þat wide water. a1350						 (?c1225)						    King Horn 		(Harl.)	 		(1901)	 l. 643  				Þe kyng rod on hontynge to þe wode wyde. a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1876)	 VI. 15  				Cristendom was nyh wydder þan þe empere of Rome. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 13702  				Þair lagh wald man suld hir stan, In to midward þis temple wide. c1405						 (c1387–95)						    G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 28  				The chambres and the stables weeren wyde. a1425						 (a1400)						    Prick of Conscience 		(Galba & Harl.)	 		(1863)	 934  				Alle þe world so wyde and brade, Our Lord speciali for man made.   Promptorium Parvulorum 		(Harl. 221)	 526  				Wyyd [?a1475 Winch. Wydde] yn space, spaciosus. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Prov. xxi. B  				It is better to dwell in a corner vnder ye house toppe, then with a braulinge woman in a wyde house. 1572						 (a1500)						    Taill of Rauf Coilȝear 		(1882)	 2  				Within thay fellis wyde. 1600    A. Munday et al.  First Pt. True Hist. Sir I. Old-castle sig. I4  				The wide horrison. a1616    W. Shakespeare As you like It 		(1623)	  ii. vii. 137  				This wide and vniuersall Theater Presents more wofull Pageants then the Sceane Wherein we play  in.       View more context for this quotation 1652    M. Nedham tr.  J. Selden Of Dominion of Sea 27  				The wide Ocean. 1698    J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 263  				The wide open Places under the Chief Cupuloes of their Buzzars. 1724    A. Ramsay Vision in  Ever Green I. 222  				A wyde and splendit Hall. 1776    J. Copland St. Andrews  ii. 28  				The burnish'd roof, that..Shone far and near o'er Ocean's wide domain. 1844    A. W. Kinglake Eothen xv. 208  				A shout that tore the wide air into tatters. 1847    J. Yeowell Chron. Anc. Brit. Church viii. 84  				At Iona, or Icolm-kill, in the midst of wide waters. 1863    C. Kingsley Water-babies iii. 123  				Tom thought nothing about what the river was like. All his fancy was, to get down to the wide wide sea. 1871    G. MacDonald Wks. Fancy & Imagination II. 230  				O all wide places, far from feverous towns!.. Room! give me room! 1920    R. Graves Country Sentiment 34  				He soars and he hovers rocking on his wings, He scans his wide parish with a sharp eye. 1995    Traveller Summer 34/3  				Picture yourself..ascending into the wide blue yonder in a hot air balloon. 2012    I. Read Hierarchies of Slavery in Santos, Brazil Concl. 197  				A wide horizon of uninhabitable marshland.  (b) As an epithet of world. Also in  whole wide world.In later use sometimes implying a contrast with the privacy or security of one's own home or country. ΚΠ eOE    Metres of Boethius 		(partly from transcript of damaged MS)	 		(2009)	 viii. 39  				Eala, þær hit wurde oðþe wolde God þæt on eorðan nu ussa tida geond þas widan weoruld wæren æghwæs swelce under sunnan. c1175    Ormulum 		(Burchfield transcript)	 l. 12117  				Off all þiss wide middell ærd Þe kine domess alle.]			 a1225    MS Lamb. in  R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies 		(1868)	 1st Ser. 77  				Þe sunne streonþ þe lome þet ho spret in to al þis wide worlde. a1325						 (c1250)						    Gen. & Exod. 		(1968)	 60  				Ðat was ðe firme morgen-tid Ðat euere sprong in werld wid. a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  ii. l. 595 (MED)  				Al the wide worldes fame Spak worschipe of hire goode name. c1405						 (c1375)						    G. Chaucer Monk's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 380  				Nero..This wide world hadde in subieccioun. c1450    in  C. Brown Relig. Lyrics 15th Cent. 		(1939)	 262 (MED)  				The worlde so wide, th'aire so remuable..what creature..May stedfast be? a1500						 (a1475)						    G. Ashby Dicta Philosophorum l. 141 in  Poems 		(1899)	 49 (MED)  				The best thinge in al this wide world is this, For to be renouned in blessed fame. 1591    E. Spenser Prosopopoia in  Complaints 135  				As we bee sonnes of the world so wide. 1598    R. Bernard tr.  Terence Hecyra  iv. iv, in  Terence in Eng. 374  				Shall we rather..leaue him to the wide world? 1622    H. Peacham Compl. Gentleman iv. 35  				Turne them out into the wide world with a little money in their purses. 1658    in  F. P. Verney  & M. M. Verney Mem. Verney Family 17th Cent. 		(1907)	 II. 69  				The world being wyde she would not venture her conscience upon a disputable point. 1662    E. Stillingfleet Origines Sacræ  i. i. §3  				These were so fully known to him..that he needed not to go to School to the wide world. 1722    D. Defoe Jrnl. Plague Year 141  				I shall be turn'd a drift to the wide World. 1773    R. Graves Spiritual Quixote II.  v. xii. 51  				The thoughts of resigning my little preferment, and embarking in the wide world with so young a consort. 1830    Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. July 136  				Had his article been the only article in the whole wide world, it might perhaps have had some small chance of insertion. 1842    C. Dickens Amer. Notes I. vi. 212  				The coarse and bloated faces..have counterparts..all the wide world over. 1847    J. B. Buckstone Flowers of Forest  iii. vii  				No, no—not for the wide wide world. 1906    K. Trask Night & Morning 34  				Take me, Leonidas, to thy strong arms—..fold me from the whole wide world. 1959    L. Armstrong in  T. Brothers Louis Armstrong in His Own Words 		(1999)	 viii. 116  				Mary-Ann had already 'hipped me to what was happening in this healthful wide beautiful world. 1975    J. B. Keane Lett. of Matchmaker 89  				The strangest feeling came over me like as if I was the only creature in the whole wide world. 2010    S. Fry Fry Chrons. 213  				Now..we were in the big wide world, one which was looking towards the punker end of the comedy spectrum.  (c)  wide brown land  n. Australian Australia. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > named regions of earth > Australasia > 			[noun]		 > Australia mainland1829 commonwealth1891 Ma State1906 Oz1908 wide brown land1908 Aussie1915 Aussieland1919 1908    Spectator 5 Sept. 329/1  				Her beauty and her terror—The wide brown land for me. 1934    J. Mackaness  & G. Mackaness 		(title)	  				The wide brown land. 1973    Australian 4 May 11  				Migrants are staying away in droves from the widest and brownest part of this wide, brown land. 2015    Courier Mail 		(Austral.)	 		(Nexis)	 4 Oct. 82  				The sights, sounds, smells and wonders of this wide brown land. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > 			[adjective]		 > that fits in specific way > loose-fitting wide?c1225 unbraced?1518 lax1621 loose-flowing1777 uncinctured1790 sloppy1825 sacky1891 ?c1225						 (?a1200)						    Ancrene Riwle 		(Cleo. C.vi)	 		(1972)	 46  				Nu comeð forð an feble mon. & hald him þach aȝelich ȝef þet he haueð an wid hod & an loke cape. ?a1300    Iacob & Iosep 		(Bodl.)	 		(1916)	 l. 99  				His fader him ȝaf a kurtel þat rum was & wid,..hit was him fotsid. c1400						 (?a1387)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Huntington HM 137)	 		(1873)	 C.  xix. l. 271 (MED)  				Thenne hadde ich wonder of hus wordes and of hus wide cloþes. c1405						 (c1390)						    G. Chaucer Monk's Prol. 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 61  				Why werestow so wyd a cope? a1500						 (?a1390)						    J. Mirk Festial 		(Gough)	 		(1905)	 196  				His cloþes were lompurt, and scho wold haue amende hom, but scho myght not, for þay wern so wyde. 1511    in  J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. 		(1902)	 IV. 197  				To be the King ane wyd doublete fra Maistir Johne of Murray. 1561    T. Paynell tr.  N. Hanapus Ensamples Vertue & Vice cxxx. sig. b.iiiiv  				Our Lorde shall take awaye..the goodly floured wide and broydred raiment. 1600    W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream  ii. i. 256  				And there the snake throwes her enammeld skinne, Weed wide enough to wrappe a Fairy  in.       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare As you like It 		(1623)	  ii. vii. 160  				His youthfull hose well sau'd, a world too wide, For his shrunke shanke. 1648    J. Beaumont Psyche  xvii. cl. 326/1  				Her Body was disposed in a frame Of wide and easie Clothes. a1700    J. Dryden tr.  Ovid Art of Love 		(1709)	  i. 38  				Let not your Teeth be yellow, or be foul; Nor in wide Shoes your Feet too loosly roul. 1767    tr.  D. Cranz Hist. Greenland I.  iii. i. 138  				The mothers, and children's nurses or waiters, put on an amaut, i.e. a garment that is so wide in the back as to hold the child.  2.   a.  Extending over or affecting a large physical space or region; far-reaching, far-ranging, extensive. Formerly chiefly poetic. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > spreading or diffusion > 			[adjective]		 > spread or diffused > widely wideOE rampanta1540 widespread1582 cheverel1583 worldwide1602 broada1616 ubiquitary1652 wide-spreading1655 broadcast1785 country-wide1845 statewide1848 nationwide1891 planetwide1920 OE    Beowulf 		(2008)	 877  				He fram Sigemunde[s] secgan hyrde ellendædum, uncuþes fela, Wælsinges gewin, wide siðas, þara þe gumena bearn gearwe ne wiston. OE    Christ & Satan 188  				Þæs ðe ic geþohte adrifan drihten of selde,..sceal [ic] nu wreclastas settan sorhgcearig, sidas [read siðas] wide. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 24991  				He es tald alsua o sight sa wide, þat fra his sight mai naman hide. 1596    E. Spenser Second Pt. Faerie Queene  iv. ix. sig. I3  				They [sc. the winds]..tosse the deepes, and teare the firmament, And all the world confound with wide  vprore.       View more context for this quotation 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  iii, in  tr.  Virgil Wks. 116  				He [sc. a snake] rages in the Fields, and wide Destruction  threats.       View more context for this quotation 1713    Countess of Winchilsea Misc. Poems 62  				Th' expatiated Downs Shall wider Scenes display of rural Glee. 1780    J. Walters Poems 53  				The British Argo..Tells her wide wanderings, and her hero's fame. 1818    J. Keats Endymion  ii. 67  				O woodland Queen,..Where dost thou listen to the wide halloos Of thy disparted nymphs? 1860    N. Hawthorne Marble Faun II. viii. 91  				After wide wanderings through the valley [etc.]. 1958    Ethics 68 225/1  				The percipiency of a wide traveler. a1986    E. W. Morse Freshwater Saga 		(1987)	 ii. 105  				His wide travels by canoe in the North. 2000    Guardian 8 Jan. (Travel section) 10/6  				The central crags and dales have wide views and a varied terrain.  b.  As the final element in combination with nouns denoting regions, areas, organizations, etc., with the sense ‘extending over or throughout the whole area of ——; affecting or reaching the whole of ——’.See also citywide adj., Europe-wide adj., nationwide adj., statewide adj., worldwide adj., etc.company-wide, country-wide, industry-wide, planet-wide, etc.: see the first element. ΚΠ 1845    Emancipator & Weekly Chron. 		(Boston)	 28 May 1/4  				A church with a compact, country-wide, or national organization. 1851    H. Melville Moby-Dick xlv. 226  				Not only did each of these famous whales enjoy great individual celebrity—nay, you may call it an ocean-wide renown. 1857    Knickerbocker May 526  				Those grand dress balls, which have attained a Union-wide celebrity. 1914    Railway Age Gaz. 7 Aug. 247/1  				Others..are supposed to..bring up any subjects that would be likely to prove of system-wide interest. 1952    W. J. Miller Introd. Hist. Geol. 		(ed. 6)	 x. 87  				At present no such subdivision into series or systems has a world-wide or even continent-wide application. 1993    Weekend Austral. 		(Brisbane)	 27 Mar. 15/1  				Jerome ‘Beyond Beef’ Rifkin..is organising an America-wide boycott of Campbell products. 2016    Church Times 5 Feb. 14/4  				The work is an ecumenical town-wide initiative. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > 			[adjective]		 mickleeOE wideOE largec1300 greata1325 muchc1330 mightyc1390 millionc1390 dreicha1400 rudea1450 massive1581 massy1588 heavy1728 magnitudinous1777 powerful1800 almighty1824 tall1842 hefty1930 honking1943 mondo1968 OE    Exodus 428  				Ne behwylfan mæg heofon and eorðe his wuldres word, widdra and siddra þonne befæðman mæge foldan sceattas, eorðan ymbhwyrft and uprodor. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 2200  				Þis nembrot wit his mikel pride Wend to wyrk wondres wide. c1405						 (c1390)						    G. Chaucer Physician's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 112  				Fame out sproong on euery syde Bothe of hir beautee and hir bountee wyde. c1450						 (?a1400)						    Wars Alexander 		(Ashm.)	 l. 1970  				For wella wide ware þe wele.., Bathe þi glorie & þi grace þi gladnes in erthe, Miȝt þou þe marches of Messedoyne mayntene þi-selfe. c1475						 (c1445)						    R. Pecock Donet 		(1921)	 110 (MED)  				iiij is to narow..it is necessarye to resolue moral vertues into a widder noumbre, so þat þilk nowmbre be not ouer large, but compendiose, and in a meene bitwixe to schort and to long. a1500						 (a1400)						    Sir Cleges 		(Adv.)	 		(1930)	 l 93 (MED)  				He thowȝt..howe he hade his maners sold And his renttis wyde. 1568    A. Scott Poems 		(1896)	 xxxvi. 62  				Lowse thow my lippis, that tyme and tyd I may gif to the lovingis wyd.  4.   a.  Having great scope or reach; encompassing, including, affecting, or spread among a large number or variety of people or things; comprehensive; diverse. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > condition or state of being inclusive > 			[adjective]		 > inclusive or comprehensive largea1400 wide1534 capable1592 inclusive1604 comprehensive1614 all-comprehensive1650 complexive1654 diffused1658 comprehensional1673 perileptic1678 all-encompassing1805 unexcluding1822 widish1845 all-embracing1847 unexclusive1852 all-inclusive1858 broad1872 embracive1897 periscopic1912 wide-angle1932 umbrella1949 1534    R. Whittington tr.  Cicero Thre Bks. Tullyes Offyces  i. sig. D.4*  				Therfore ryseth the large and wyde prayse by rhetoriciens, of Marathon [L. Hinc rhetorum campus de Marathone]. 1657    T. Stanley Psalterium Carolinum sig. N  				Let thy wide Mercy me, and them infold. 1670    J. Milton Hist. Brit.  ii. 77  				These perpetual exploits abroad won him wide fame. 1782    F. Burney Cecilia II.  iii. vi. 91  				I fear the misfortunes of Mr. Belfield have spread a ruin wider than his own. 1797    E. Malone in  J. Reynolds Wks. I. p. xxxv  				In the historical department [of pictures] he took a wider range. 1815    J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art II. 106  				There is yet a wide field for useful experiment. 1868    J. T. Nettleship Ess. Browning's Poetry i. 54  				How to use each his own and his mistresses' attributes for the widest good. 1895    Bookman Oct. 15/1  				[His] wide experience as a teacher..and an inspector of schools. 1910    Times 26 Nov. 15/3  				Through his volumes on ‘Theism’ and ‘Anti-theistic Theories’..Professor Flint appealed to a wider audience. 1936    J. Agate Diary 27 Sept. in  Selective Ego 		(1976)	 48  				F. Y.'s interests are very wide, and he can write equally well about church organs and flying. 1992    Food Entertaining Summer 23/2 		(advt.)	  				A wide variety of food is prepared on the chopping board. 2016    Advertiser 		(Austral.)	 		(Nexis)	 31 Jan. 2  				Web-footed geckos communicate with a wide range of sounds.  b.  Of a word, description, etc.: having a broad range of meaning or application; general, loose; inexplicit, vague. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > obscurity > 			[adjective]		 > vague or inexplicit oblique?a1475 overthwart1545 indirect1584 slenting1642 undeterminate1649 vaguea1661 wide1662 indeterminate1773 unexplicit1775 nebulose1799 imprecise1805 misty1816 nebulous1817 inexplicit1827 fuzzy1937 soft-focused1942 wifty-wafty1943 1662    D. Burston Εὐαγγελιστης ἐτι εὐαγγελιζομενος 206  				Others..who might otherwise loose themselves..in the wide term all. 1698    J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 288  				Though his Verses are most Elegant,..yet the description is very wide. 1703    tr.  S. von Pufendorf Of Law of Nature & Nations i. 10  				The Latin word Jus is a very wide and ambiguous term. 1781    Parl. Reg. 1781–96 II. 115  				The terms..were too vague, and too indefinite... What then would they be able to make of such a wide description? 1843    J. Ruskin Mod. Painters I. 14  				I want a definition of art wide enough to include all its varieties of aim. 1858    M. A. Paul Uncle Ralph xxii. 225  				‘Never is a wide word, Miriam,’ said Ailie. 1904    Solicitors' Jrnl. 8 Oct. 761/2  				Litigation will be resorted to to determine whether the very wide definition of ‘street’ in section 4..is to be cut down in its application to bye-laws. 1947    Jrnl. Philos. 44 428  				Knowledge. In current employment this word is too wide and vague to be a name of anything in particular. 2005    D. K. Das Asian. Econ. & Finance vii. 266  				Monetary co-operation is a deceptively wide term covering a large spectrum of policy strands.  c.  Characterized by breadth of opinion or feeling; (also) characterized by liberal-mindedness; tolerant, unprejudiced, broad-minded. Cf. broad adj. 11a.Formerly also in  Wide Church: = Broad Church n. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > high intelligence, genius > 			[adjective]		 > of mind, operations: broad, deep, strong stronga1393 profounda1450 reachinga1500 ingenious1509 spacious1609 vast1610 vigorous1640 rugged1678 wide1717 broad1832 oceanica1834 in depth1959 1717    J. Hunt Funeral Serm. 26  				The large and wide view he had of the Sacred Writings, must render him greatly accomplish'd for this Part of the Ministerial Office. 1763    J. Mills  & T. Blackwell Mem. Court Augustus III.  xi. 61  				This Observation is taken from Fact, and a wide View of human Affairs. 1824    T. B. Macaulay Athen. Orators ⁋22  				States have always been best governed by men who have taken a wide view of public affairs. 1842    Ld. Tennyson Two Voices in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 II. 124  				When, wide in soul and bold of tongue, Among the tents I paused and sung. 1884    Spectator 19 Apr. 513/2  				Both the High Churchman and the Wide Churchman. 1884    Spectator 19 Apr. 513/2  				The Wide Church or High-Church circles. 1976    Ld. Home Way Wind Blows viii. 135  				He was credited with a wide and liberal outlook on human affairs. 1990    Independent 28 Sept. 15  				He..was a man greatly liked for his wide views. 2009    Sun 		(Nexis)	 26 Mar. 11  				The kind who believe they have a wide view on life, but who are in truth more narrow-minded than most stereotypical bigots.  II.  Senses relating to measurement from side to side.  5.  Having great extent from side to side; of large or more than average width. Opposed to narrow.Used where actual measurement from point to point is possible or contemplated, and thus now distinguished from broad, which tends to refer more generally to superficial extent. ΚΠ OE    Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. 		(Royal)	 		(1997)	 xxxv. 484  				He [sc. Noes arc] wæs on nyþeweardan wid, & on ufweardan nearo. OE    West Saxon Gospels: Matt. 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 vii. 13  				Þæt geat is swyþe wid [L. lata porta] & se weg is swiþe rum þe to forspillednesse gelæt. lOE    Bounds (Sawyer 354) in  M. Gelling Place-names Berks. 		(1976)	 III. 756  				Ðonon to widan geate, ðonon to eadulfes mære. ?a1300    Iacob & Iosep 		(Bodl.)	 		(1916)	 l. 146 (MED)  				Hi ladden Iosep into..stretes wide & long. a1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(BL Add. 27944)	 		(1975)	 II.  xix. cxxvii. 1367  				Piramis is a figure..wyde byneþe and streight aboue. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 1682  				Þu sal..Mak a dor wit mesur wide. c1450						 (c1380)						    G. Chaucer House of Fame 		(Fairf. 16)	 		(1878)	 l. 797  				Euery sercle causynge other Wydder than hym self was. a1500						 (?a1400)						    Firumbras 		(1935)	 l. 120 (MED)  				The dyche lay wyde & depe. 1645    J. Milton L'Allegro in  Poems 33  				Shallow Brooks, and Rivers wide. 1655    M. Casaubon Treat. Enthusiasme ii. 84  				He was so big of body, that no door was wide enough for him. 1725    E. Fenton in  A. Pope et al.  tr.  Homer Odyssey I.  i. 173  				A purple carpet spread the pavement wide. 1762    W. Smellie Treat. Midwifery 		(ed. 4)	 I. 81  				The brim of the Pelvis is wider from side to side than from the back to the fore-part. 1830    La Belle Assemblee Jan. 27/2  				She..is obliged to place her head sideways to ascend her carriage, her head-dress being wider than the pannels of her coach-door. 1888    C. T. Jacobi Printers' Vocab. 156  				Wide measures, long and wide measures of type, distinct from narrow or short ones. 1910    S. Sisson Text-bk. Vet. Anat. 720  				The cerebellum is very wide and short. 1981    G. Vidal Creation  ii. ii. 35  				The new palace of Darius is approached by a wide straight avenue. 2006    R. Downie Medicus lxvi. 298  				The wide bed was strewn with plump blue cushions.  6.  Measuring a width specified by a numerical quantity or indicated by a comparison.  a.  With a (usually premodifying) noun phrase consisting of a noun denoting a measure of width premodified by a numeral or quantifier. Also forming part of such a phrase used attributively (e.g. a two metre wide hole) or introduced by of (e.g. a hole of two metres wide).In Old English with the measure (and sometimes also the numeral) in the genitive. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > breadth or width > 			[adjective]		 > having specific breadth or width wideOE OE    Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. 		(Royal)	 		(1997)	 i. 185  				Wyrc þe nu ænne arc, þreo hund fæðma lang, & fifti fæðma wid, & þritig fæðma heah. OE    Genesis A 		(1931)	 1307  				Þu þær [prob. read þæt] fær gewyrc fiftiges wid, ðrittiges heah [and] þreohund lang elngemeta. a1300						 (c1250)						    Floris & Blauncheflur 		(Vitell.)	 		(1966)	 l. 226  				Hondred teyse þe tour is heie..& an hundret teyse hit is wid. a1325						 (c1250)						    Gen. & Exod. 		(1968)	 l. 565  				Ðat arche was...l.ti elne wid and .xxx.ti heg. c1440    Pallad. on Husb.  ii. 110  				An aker lond..therout of may be tolde Of squaris x feet wide,..ccc square of x, and twyes twelue. 1483						 (    tr.  G. Deguileville Pilgrimage of Soul 		(Caxton)	  iv. xxxvi. f. lxxxiv  				A traylyng gowne of twelue yerdes wyde. ?1578    W. Patten Let. Entertainm. Killingwoorth 11  				Upon the first payr of Posts wear set, too cumly square wyre Cages, each a three foot long, too foot wide & hy. 1663    B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders 11  				A Bed-chamber..Thirty foot wide. 1699    Cal. Virginia State Papers I. 64  				We came to a broad Branch of about fifty or sixty yards wide. 1707    J. Barker Treasury of Fortification 248  				The Bridges of the Body of the Place, are generally from 14 to 16 Feet wide. 1768    W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. 		(1793)	 442  				Every cartway leading to any market-town must be made twenty feet wide at the least. 1842    J. C. Loudon Suburban Horticulturist 637  				Take half-inch and two-inch wide rods or laths. 1854    Poultry Chron. 1 228  				New twine netting..one yard wide. 1869    Amer. Jrnl. Insanity 25 376  				A passage of six feet wide. 1913    Independent 21 Aug. 426/2  				I stood..looking down into a quarter-mile wide hole. 1969    D. F. Costello Prairie World 		(1975)	 iii. 54  				North of this lies the boreal forest in a belt up to 500 miles wide. 2014    New Yorker 21 Apr. 49/2  				A giant rectangle..nearly two miles long and four hundred and ninety feet wide.  b.  Expressing relative width: having (more, less, or a specified) extent from side to side. ΚΠ OE    Blickling Homilies 127  				Þonne is þær on þære myclan ciricean geworht emb þa lastas utan [sc. an enclosure], hwene widdre þonne bydenfæt, up oþ mannes breost heah. ?a1400						 (a1338)						    R. Mannyng Chron. 		(Petyt)	 		(1996)	  i. 7397  				Grante..me..no more lond, wide no side, þan I may sprede a boles hide. c1450						 (?a1400)						    Wars Alexander 		(Ashm.)	 l. 1324  				Þurȝe þaim he rynnes, And makis a wai wyde enoȝe waynes to mete. 1579    E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Sept. 210  				Had his wesand bene a little widder, He would haue deuoured both hidder and shidder. 1597    W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet  iii. i. 96  				Not so deepe as a Well, nor so wide as a barne doore. 1651    J. French Art Distillation  iii. 84  				The Ash-hole..must be as wide as the Furnace. 1663    B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders 19  				Windowes..must be higher then wide. 1701    Philos. Trans. 1700–1 		(Royal Soc.)	 22 808  				The hole..which seem'd to me..to be twice as wide as the entrance. 1761    W. Osmer Treat. Dis. & Lameness Horses 		(new ed.)	 39  				The iron should be very narrow, little wider than a plate. 1884    L. F. Allen New Amer. Farm Bk. 103  				The depth of the furrow should be about one-half its width, and the land or ridges as wide as can conveniently be made. 1893    C. Hodges in  Reliquary Jan. 9  				The side walls..are built of large stones, as wide as the walls are thick. 1917    Trans. Amer. Entomol. Soc. 43 82  				Head as wide as the thorax. 1954    R. Wailes Eng. Windmill iii. 38  				The original stage..was made entirely of timber, and was wider than the present one. 2006    K. D. Rose Beginning Age Mammals ix. 151/1  				The humerus is as wide as it is long.  III.  Senses relating to a large interval, space, or difference between things or people.  7.   a.  Opened widely or to the full extent; expanded; (of the arms) stretched widely apart. Now chiefly of the eyes, often implying surprise, amazement, alarm, etc.In many contexts generally superseded by wide open adj. 1. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > 			[adjective]		 > wide open or gaping yawningc893 wideOE wide open?c1225 gap-wide1582 gaping1594 mouthed1609 patulous1616 wide-opened1635 dehiscent1649 discontinuous1667 patulent1712 hiant1800 yawn-mouthed1861 the world > space > relative position > posture > action or fact of stretching body > 			[adjective]		 > specific part of body extent1436 outstretched1535 wide1707 outflung1830 outheld1872 the world > space > relative position > posture > position of specific body parts > 			[adjective]		 > arm or hand > specific arm wreathed1584 wide1707 kimboed1748 hyperabducted1945 OE    Whale 59  				Hi þær in farað unware weorude, oþþæt se wida ceafl gefylled bið. c1225						 (?c1200)						    St. Margaret 		(Royal)	 		(1934)	 21  				He..sturede toward tis meoke meiden, & ȝeonede mid his wide geneow uppon hire ungeinliche. ?c1225						 (?a1200)						    Ancrene Riwle 		(Cleo. C.vi)	 		(1972)	 160  				Ȝef þe keache cuppe wellinde bres to drinken ȝeot in his wide þrote. a1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(BL Add. 27944)	 		(1975)	 I.  viii. xxvii. 506 (MED)  				Holes and pores of þe body ben open and wide bycause of hete of þe ayer. ?a1425    MS Hunterian 95 f. 115, in  Middle Eng. Dict. at Wid(e  				Make þe pacientes nose þrilles wider with þe rote of genciane oþer wiþ a spounge. ?1507    W. Dunbar Tua Mariit Wemen 		(Rouen)	 in  Poems 		(1998)	 I. 50  				Ȝit tuk I neuer the wosp clene out of my wyde throte. 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane Commentaries f. ccccxlixv  				That a wyder entrie be not set open to ye Turkes to inuade vs. 1607    ‘W. S.’ Puritaine  i. 12  				Speake lowe George; Prison Rattes haue wider eares then those in Malt-lofts. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Isa. lvii. 4  				Against whom make ye a wide mouth, and draw out the  tongue?       View more context for this quotation 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  i. 762  				All access was throng'd, the Gates And Porches wide .       View more context for this quotation 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  viii. 467  				Wide was the wound, But suddenly with flesh fill'd up &  heal'd.       View more context for this quotation 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  iii, in  tr.  Virgil Wks. 109  				The Mares..with wide Nostrils snuff the Western  Air.       View more context for this quotation 1707    E. Smith Phædra & Hippolytus  i. 1  				She from his wide, deceiv'd, desiring Arms Flew tastless. 1741    R. Rawlin Christ Righteousness of his People ii. 55  				What a wide door would this open to the most licentious practices. 1820    J. Keats Eve of St. Agnes in  Lamia & Other Poems 85  				Many a door was wide. 1822    J. Galt Provost xxxvi. 260  				With wide and wild arms, like a witch in a whirlwind. 1867    W. Morris Life & Death of Jason  xv. 289  				The three..gazed at him with wide eyes wondering. 1912    Sat. Evening Post 17 Aug. 21/3  				The leader sprang at me with wide arms. 1921    J. Goodwin Man with Brooding Eyes xxvii. 353  				Joan..picked up one of the notes. She stared at it with wide eyes. 2010    C. Rush Grandfather Tree vii. 121  				She..watched with wide eyes the firestorm in front of her.  b.  Phonetics. Of a vowel sound: pronounced with the muscles involved (esp. those of the tongue) in a relatively relaxed state; pronounced with a relatively wide opening of the mouth or (now esp.) of the pharyngeal cavity. Cf. lax adj. 5c, open adj. 13a. Opposed to narrow adj. 1d. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > study of speech sound > speech sound > vowel > 			[adjective]		 > types of openeOE sharp?1533 simple1582 small1599 soft1625 obscurea1637 round1710 slender1755 close1760 wide1824 lowered1836 narrow1844 labialized1856 orinasal1856 central1857 reduced1861 free1864 high1867 low1867 mid1867 mixed1867 rounded1867 unrounded1871 raised1876 unreduced1894 obscured1897 spread1902 lax1909 slack1909 tense1909 centralized1926 flat1934 r-coloured1935 checked1943 1824    T. Martin Philol. Gram. Eng. Lang. vii. 94  				In the word parasol, the vowel is wide. 1867    A. M. Bell Visible Speech: Sci. Universal Alphabetics 72  				The vowels—whether ‘Primary’, ‘Wide’, or ‘Rounded’—are divided into three classes of palato-lingual formations. 1890    H. Sweet Primer Spoken Eng. 4  				Each of the vowels..is either narrow or wide, according as the tongue and uvula are tense..or relaxed. 1949    R.-M. S. Heffner Gen. Phonetics v. 96  				Later scholars have substituted the terms tense and lax for narrow and wide. 1999    H. van der Hulst et al.  in  H. van der Hulst Word Prosodic Syst. in Langs. of Europe vii. 451  				The Mokshan dialect of Mordvin has two groups of vowels that behave differently with respect to accent: the ‘narrow’ vowels (/i u ə/) and the ‘wide’ vowels (/e o ä a/). 2016    O. G. Harry in  O.-M. Ndimele Stud. Nigerian Linguistics 216  				For the wide vowels the tongue root is drawn forward allowing for a wide space in the pharyngeal cavity.  8.   a.  Of two or more things: set far apart; widely spaced. Also of a thing: having widely-spaced constituent elements. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > 			[adjective]		 > far apart (of boundaries) wide?a1425 ?a1425    tr.  Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie 		(Hunterian)	 		(1994)	 43 (MED)  				Þey resseiuen þe roundenes off þe bones off þe hande towarde þe hande, and þei ben..moste wide [L. grossiora] where þei haue moste sinewes and brawnes. ?c1425    Recipe in  Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. 		(Arun. 334)	 		(1790)	 456 (MED)  				Drawe hom [sc. dates and milk] thurgh a streynour that is wyde. ?c1450    in  G. J. Aungier Hist. & Antiq. Syon Monastery 		(1840)	 272 (MED)  				The body..schal be leyed upon the bere, and couered withe a cheste, made in maner of a wyde latyce, that the body may be seen. c1484						 (a1475)						    J. de Caritate tr.  Secreta Secret. 		(Takamiya)	 		(1977)	 201 (MED)  				He þat hath wyde pasis in his gate and slow schal be prosperus in hys werkys. 1567    A. Golding tr.  Ovid Metamorphosis 		(new ed.)	  ix. f. 110v  				Thou seeist mee a Lord of waters in thy Realme Where I in wyde and wynding banks doo beare my flowing streame. 1595    R. Parry Moderatus viii. sig. L2v  				The fluent streame that leades a swelling tyde, When Aquilon the raging waues doeth reare, Bounce not more oft vpon their bankes so wyde. 1635    W. Saltonstall tr.  G. Mercator Historia Mundi 368  				Thee Druentia that doth glide With winding course betweene his bancks so wide. 1691    tr.  ‘C. Reinking’ Πολιτικός Μέγας iii. 7  				They marched their Army along the Valleys, and then finding the Banks of the River become wide, must of Necessity be at more trouble to make Bridges over them. 1732    J. Horsley Britannia Romana 118  				These castella seem to have stood closest, where the stations are widest, and are by some modern authors called mile castles or milliary castella. 1841    C. Dickens Old Curiosity Shop  i. i. 38  				It runs between green banks which grow wider and wider until at last it joins the broad vast sea. 1882    Chambers's Jrnl. 29 July 479/2  				Nets of a wider mesh than those presently in use should be made compulsory, so that only large herring be captured. 1948    M. Mclaverty Three Brothers iv. 53  				He took wide steps across the damp floor. 1972    J. Fisher Guide to Needlecraft iv. 78/2  				A wide mesh gives only a few threads or holes to the inch, and is useful for big-scale work. 2010    C. X. Bowman Orvis Guide beginning Saltwater Fly Fishing x. 30  				Rocky mountain streams with wider banks, where if you can get midstream you have plenty of room.., allow rods up to eight feet long.  b.  figurative. Cribbage. Of playing cards: far apart in a series. Somewhat rare. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > continuity or uninterruptedness > discontinuity or interrupted condition > 			[adjective]		 > not consecutive > too far apart to form a series wide?1870 ?1870    F. Hardy  & J. R. Ware Mod. Hoyle 85  				Endeavor to balk his crib by discarding wide cards, so that he may not be able to form a sequence. 1897    R. F. Foster Compl. Hoyle 414  				Cards which are likely to form parts of sequences are called close cards, and those which are too widely separated to do so are called wide cards. 1977    Encycl. Americana VIII. 187/1  				If one player has close cards he should play so as to have chances for a run; but if his cards are wide, then he should try to keep the opponent from scoring. 1983    R. L. Frey According to Hoyle 		(new ed.)	 69  				When nothing better offers, give two wide cards—at least three apart in rank. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > 			[adjective]		 sideOE fara1000 ferrenc1160 lungeteync1330 on dreicha1400 yondera1413 widec1425 roomc1443 lontaignec1450 remote1533 distant1549 remotedc1580 disloigned1596 discoasted1598 dissite1600 far-off1600 aloof1608 longinque1614 distantial1648 Atlantic1790 far-distant1793 far-away1816 far-apart1865 way off1871 c1425    J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. 		(Augustus A.iv)	  ii. l. 362 (MED)  				Priam had, of birthe..Cassandra..Of whom þe fame sprang in costys wyde. c1450    Siege Calais 		(Rome)	 in  PMLA 		(1952)	 67 890 (MED)  				The Duc of Burgone..Made grete assemble in landes wide. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Psalms cii[i]. 12  				Look how wyde the east is from the west, so farre hath he set oure synnes from vs. 1590    E. Spenser Faerie Queene  ii. viii. sig. T7v  				His poynant speare he thrust..At proud Cymochles, whiles his shield was wyde. 1597    J. Dee 28 Sept. in  Private Diary 		(1842)	 59  				Calcot in Chesshyre, abowt six myles wide of Chester. 1682    O. Heywood Autobiogr., Diaries, Anecd. & Event Bks. 		(1885)	 IV. 76  				A place..4 miles wide of St. Albans. 1729    J. Swift Hist. 2nd Solomon in  Wks. 		(1765)	 VIII.  i. 253  				He was to set out..to another part of the kingdom, thirty miles wide of the place appointed. 1750    W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman IV. vi. 81  				Kestever, two Miles wide of Saffron-Walden in Essex. 1854    R. S. Surtees Handley Cross 		(new ed.)	 xxxvi. 281  				Shortstubble put him on a line as wide of his own wheat as he could.  10.  Chiefly in predicative use.  a.  With of, from. That deviates from what is correct, desired, or intended; far from something in nature, character, outlook, etc.; divergent from, or not in accordance or agreement with, something; very different or alien to something. Also: †far from doing something (obsolete).Often understood as a figurative use of sense  11a. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > disharmony or incongruity > 			[adjective]		 discordablea1393 discordanta1393 discordinga1398 incongruea1398 inconvenient1398 unaccording1398 discordc1415 disagreeablea1425 inconsutilec1450 unaccordanta1470 dissonant1490 disaccordanta1513 disagreeing?1526 incongruent1531 wide1531 unconsonant1535 dissonate1548 dissenting1550 dissident?c1550 unagreeable?1550 disconformc1554 discrepant1556 absonant1564 dissentany1586 disconsorted1589 disagreed1596 discordous1597 discordious1598 incorrespondent1599 dissentious1605 untunable1605 incongruous1611 unagreeing1611 unanswerable1611 eccentric1612 unconcurrent1613 disconsonant1614 dissentaneous1623 dissorting1631 uncorrespondent1631 discorrespondent1635 incoincident1636 unconcurring1639 eccentrical1640 unatonable1645 incompliant1647 pluranimous1650 disconformeda1658 inagreeable1657 inconsonant1658 disharmonious1659 inconcinn1660 discongruous1663 unharmonious1667 discoherent1675 uncongruous1709 inharmonious1749 immutual1768 unharmonized1803 unconsentaneous1818 inaccordant1822 uncorresponding1826 unharmonizing1851 non-concurring1866 discordful1867 disharmonic1887 non-concurrent1907 1531    Bp. W. Barlow Dyaloge Lutheran Faccyons sig. q  				I se the lyuynge of the clergye is farre wyde from the doctrine of Cryst & example of thappostles. 1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus Apophthegmes Pref. **vv  				Valerius Maximus and Plinius, in the reportyng of a certain alter[c]acion yt was betwene Cn. Domitius & Lucius Crassus.., how wyde been thei the one from the other. 1561    T. Hoby tr.  B. Castiglione Courtyer  ii. sig. K.iiii  				It seemeth a matter very wide from reason. ?1566    W. P. tr.  C. S. Curio Pasquine in Traunce f. 34v  				They are so farre wyde from the institution of Christ, & from the truth. 1601    J. Marston et al.  Iacke Drums Entertainm.  ii. sig. C3v  				Those that are farre more yong and wittie, Are wide from singing such a Dittie. 1646    Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica  i. vii. 28  				How wide he is from  truth.       View more context for this quotation 1691    J. Evelyn Diary 		(1955)	 V. 72  				The Relation he gave..was very wide from what we fancied. 1711    in  Hist. MSS Comm.: 10th Rep.: App. Pt. V: MSS Marquis of Ormonde &c. 		(1885)	 112 in  Parl. Papers 1884–5 (C. 4576-I) XLII. 1  				A lasting happiness, of which they are wide..thro' want of religion. 1735    G. Berkeley Def. Free-thinking in Math. §46  				Your Comment must be wide of the Author's meaning. 1796    F. Burney Camilla IV.  viii. xi. 399  				Conduct as mischievous in its effects, and as wide from artlessness in its appearance, as if she had been brought up and nourished in fashionable egotism. 1807    J. Bentham Mem. & Corr. in  Wks. 		(1843)	 X. 423  				My own notions..were too wide of the notions prevalent among lawyers. 1812    H. F. Cary tr.  Dante Paradiso  viii. 136  				Hence befals That Esau is so wide of Jacob. 1845    C. Dickens Cricket on Hearth iii. 134  				You had best not interrupt me..till you understand me; and you're wide of doing so. 1904    A. Heilprin Tower of Pelée 53  				Interesting conjectural results, the verity of which..may be very wide of the real truth. 1995    W. D. Jordan Tumult & Silence at Second Creek 		(rev. ed.)	 x. 195  				The Reverend Mr. Ingraham's remarks on this matter reflected conventional wisdom as to what ought to be happening on Sundays, and seem very wide of actual practice in Adams County. 2011    Daily Mail 		(Nexis)	 30 Nov.  				Svetlana..was reported to have converted to Roman Catholicism and become a nun... I discovered that this was some way wide of the truth. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lack of truth, falsity > 			[adjective]		 > amiss, out of order amissc1325 out of harrea1327 wronga1425 wide1545 misplaced1563 awrya1586 ajar1807 off the rails1848 agley1882 blooey1920 off-centre1930 off base1940 snafued1944 off target1954 off beam1958 1545    R. Ascham Toxophilus  i. sig. K.iii  				So is he best of all pleased, to se thinges which be wyde and amysse, brought to peace and attonement. 1583    G. Gifford Catechisme sig. A7  				Q: Yee conclude then, that..the actions of the diuel and al the wicked, are measured and directed by his [sc. God's] prouidence... A: Or els it were wide with vs. 1606    H. Holland  & E. Topsell Hist. Adam  iii. f. 129  				The very Diuels are chained continuallie by his prouidence, or else it were wide with vs all on earth. 1614    Bp. J. Hall Contempl. II. O.T.  vi. 211  				It were wide for vs, if our suites [to God] should be euer heard. 1614    Bp. J. Hall Contempl. II. O.T.  viii. 379  				It would bee wide with the best of vs, if the eye of God should looke backward to our former estate. 1657    J. Trapp Comm. Ezra (Psalms xiii. 3) 601  				It were wide with the faithfull, if they had not their God to repair unto in distresse, pouring out their souls into his blessed bosome. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > error in belief or opinion > 			[adjective]		 > erring in opinion or belief mislevingc1390 erroneous1512 mismeaning1532 errorious1543 wide1547 deceived1569 errant1609 mislearned1642 pseudodoxalc1648 pseudodox1650 vicious1657 heterodox1658 1547    I. B. Bryefe & Plaine Declaracion sig. a. iii  				I am sure ther is no man so farre wyde as once to thynke that the Apostles were here in commaunded to preache vnto Infantes. 1561    T. Hoby tr.  B. Castiglione Courtyer  i. sig. F.iiiiv  				Whoso heareth him, maye..thinke that he also with very litle a doe, mighte attaine to that perfection, but whan he commeth to the proofe shall finde himselfe farre wide. 1579    L. Tomson tr.  J. Calvin Serm. Epist. S. Paule to Timothie & Titus 140/2  				Let vs see if this be well practised, alas, the matter is farre wide [Fr. Helas il s'en faut beaucoup]. 1608    W. Shakespeare King Lear xxi. 48  				Lear. Yar a spirit I know, where did you dye. Cord. Still, still, farre wide .       View more context for this quotation 1630    G. Hakewill Apologie 		(ed. 2)	 		(advt.)	 sig. Zz2v  				How farre wide the foure most noted doctours of the Westerne Church..were in the exposition of many passages of holy Scripture. a1652    R. Brome City Wit  v. sig. F7v, in  Five New Playes 		(1653)	  				Py. I know your purpose..; you come after the Marriage to forbid the banes... Lin. Good Mrs. Sneakup, you are wide. I come to wish joy to the match. 1694    tr.  Terence Fair Andrian  ii, in  Terence's Comedies 16  				No, no, you're wide. 1830    H. W. Montagu Monsieur Mallét 13  				The Frenchman heard with pain The words ‘dead-letters’... ‘Are doze den, sare, “de letters of de dead?”’ ‘Hi! hi!—you're wide!’ said Jerry with a leer: ‘Erronous wide!’  11.   a.  Of a shot, throw, etc.: that misses to one side of a point aimed at (by a large distance); at a (large) distance to one side of an intended or correct target. Also in figurative contexts, esp. in wide of (also †from) the mark at mark n.1 23b. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > bowls or bowling > 			[adjective]		 > wide of mark widea1535 a1535    T. More Dialoge of Comfort 		(1553)	  i. xvi. sig. D.i.v  				That laste bolte I thincke loe, that syth I saye the same my self, you be content to take vp, it lyeth so farre wyde. 1598    W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost  iv. i. 132  				Wide a the bow hand, yfaith your hand is  out.       View more context for this quotation 1669    S. Sturmy Mariners Mag.  v. xii. 70  				If the Shot be both wide and too low. 1699    B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew  				Wide, when the Biass of the Bowl holds not enough. 1784    Gentleman's Mag. Dec. 917/2  				Thrown too close, the shots your hopes elude, Wide of your aim, and innocent of blood. 1854    Dublin Univ. Mag. Jan. 67/1  				He was not a skilful fencer... His guards were all wide, and his eyes unsteady. 1868    Amer. Phrenological Jrnl. Apr. 164/1  				There was..little probability of his being suddenly upset by a wide ball from the ‘pitcher's’ hand. 1911    U.S. Naval Inst. Proc. Dec. 1233  				Warning guns were fired from the fort; the first shots were wide. 1965    A. S. Byatt Shadow of Sun 		(1991)	 v. 118  				She threw the wet ball at him, all anyhow. ‘That was wide,’ said Jeremy. ‘You're losing your touch.’ 2014    J. Stockwin Pasha v. 140  				They were now headed for the safety of the open sea and the next shots were wide.  b.  Cricket. Designating a delivery judged to have been bowled too wide for the batter to hit from where he or she stands to receive the ball and from a normal guard position, for which a run is awarded to the batting side. Frequently in  wide ball. Cf. wide n. 3. ΘΚΠ the world > space > direction > 			[adjective]		 > given direction towards a mark > deviating from the aim wide1827 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > 			[adjective]		 > deviating from straight course wrongc1440 swerving1534 wrya1586 wriedc1595 diverted1608 dissilient1656 deviatory1702 out-of-the-waya1732 tangent1787 wide1827 deflected1860 tangential1867 deviative1878 deviating1883 society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > bowling > 			[adjective]		 > types of delivery or ball wide1827 shooting1833 full-pitched1834 bumping1851 overpitched1855 hand over head1862 bumpy1864 right arm1877 breaking1881 fast-breaking1893 leg-breaking1896 hittable1898 off-breaking1904 inswinging1920 underpitched1927 outswinging1929 1827    Brighton Gaz. 20 Sept.  				Kent..Wide balls 4, byes 1. 1828    Bell's Life in London 15 June 4/1  				The umpire..shall adjudge one run to the striker..which shall be put down to the score of wide balls. 1837    Huntingdon, Bedford, & Peterborough Gaz. 5 Aug. 7/5  				The fielding, on the part of Sussex, was so beautiful during the first innings, that the Nottingham men scored neither wide balls, byes, nor no ball. 1853    ‘C. Bede’ Adventures Mr. Verdant Green xi. 101  				The first ball was ‘wide’. 1901    F. Presbrey et al.  Athletics at Princeton 559/2  				Leg Byes 0 Wide Balls 4. 1943    Yorkshire Evening Post 15 Dec. 4/5  				Otley made 251 for 8, byes contributing 25 and wide balls 25 to the total. 1987    Sydney Morning Herald 		(Nexis)	 2 Jan. 1  				Botham..mauled 26 off Simon Davis's eighth over—4, 4, 2, 4, wide ball, 6, 6. 2006    Daily Mail 		(Nexis)	 10 June 104  				Ahmed, a 20-year-old fast bowler, was called into the attack. His first delivery was wide but his next removed Jayasuriya.  12.  Extending far between two notional limits; (of a difference, variation, etc., between two or more people or things) very large, considerable.See also to give a wide berth to at berth n. 1. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > 			[adjective]		 > extending far between limits wide1563 1563    L. Humphrey Nobles or of Nobilitye sig. o.iv  				Theyr enemyes laughe and tryumphe, for so wyde gappe opened to spoyle them. 1578    T. Twyne tr.  L. Daneau Wonderfull Woorkmanship of World xlii. f.83v  				There is a threefolde, and that most large & wide difference between them. 1589    G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie  ii. ix. 68  				Bycause your concordes containe the chief part of Musicke in your meetre, their distaunces may not be too wide or farre a sunder. a1616    W. Shakespeare Cymbeline 		(1623)	  v. vi. 194  				The wide difference 'Twixt Amorous, and  Villanous.       View more context for this quotation 1646    T. Edwards 3rd Pt. Gangræna 7  				I put a wide difference between a simple pure Independent, yea a simple Anabaptist,..and between an Arian, Antitrinitarian, Antiscripturist, Perfectist. 1704    J. Swift Tale of Tub vi. 125  				At every Period duely comparing the Doctrine with the Practice, there was never seen a wider Difference between two Things. 1746    W. Dunkin tr.  Horace in  P. Francis  & W. Dunkin tr.  Horace Epistles  ii. ii. 293  				The wide Distinction..Between an open, hospitable Man, And Prodigal; the Frugalist secure, And Miser, pinch'd with Penury. 1857    W. A. Miller Elements Chem.: Org. 		(1862)	 i. §2. 49  				The wider is the interval between the respective places in the series. 1865    J. Ruskin Sesame & Lilies  ii. 161  				There is a wide difference between elementary knowledge and superficial knowledge. 1912    Daily Tel. 19 Dec. 2/3  				Among foreign railways,..after some wide fluctuations San Paulo finished at a substantial improvement. 1944    Sun 		(Baltimore)	 20 May 12/4  				Wide variation occurred in prices, with the average range from $26 to $36. 1967    Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 113 340/2  				Dr. Pringle has interesting things to say about wide discrepancies between S.Q. and I.Q. 2003    N.Y. Times 		(National ed.)	 4 Dec.  c5 		(advt.)	  				CBS dominated the competition with the widest margin of victory in 15 years.  13.   a.  Going beyond the bounds of what is considered to be normal, acceptable, or proper; unrestrained, wild; immoderate, excessive; morally lax, loose, immoral. Cf. broad adj. 6,   8, steep adj. 5. Now somewhat rare (colloquial or slang in later use). ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > 			[adjective]		 golec888 canga1225 light?c1225 wooinga1382 nicea1387 riota1400 wantonc1400 wrenec1400 lachesc1450 loose?a1500 licentious1555 libertine1560 prostitute1569 riggish1569 wide1574 slipper1581 slippery1586 sportive1595 gay1597 Cyprian1598 suburb1598 waggish1600 smicker1606 suburbian1606 loose-living1607 wantona1627 free-living1632 libertinous1632 loose-lived1641 Corinthian1642 akolastic1656 slight1685 fast1699 freea1731 brisk1740 shy1787 slang1818 randomc1825 fastish1832 loosish1846 slummya1860 velocious1872 fly1880 slack1951 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > exaggeration, hyperbole > 			[adjective]		 > of language windya1382 wide1574 fustian1592 high-flown1632 tall1670 screamy1882 the world > relative properties > quantity > sufficient quantity, amount, or degree > excessive amount or degree > 			[adjective]		 > excessive or too great in amount or degree > excessive in degree unmeasurablea1398 dismeasurec1400 dismeasurable1477 dismeasured1483 over1494 endlya1513 intolerable1544 wide1574 overloading1576 unconscionable1576 meanless1587 powerable1588 hyperbolical1589 extravagant1598 grievous1632 flagrant1634 exorbitant1648 overbearinga1708 unbalanced1712 well-favoured1746 steep1856 thick1884 ripe1918 1574    J. Davidson Ane Dialog betuix Clerk & Courteour in  J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation 		(1891)	 I. 307  				The Courteour, with wordis wyde, Said ‘I heir nathing bot prouyde, And get now that, and get now this.’ 1656    G. Collier Vindiciæ Thesium de Sabbato 		(new ed.)	 Pref. 1  				Any man that hath not a weak head and a wide conscience. 1775    J. Moir Scholar's Vade Mecum  				Effusus, wide, open, liberal, immoderate. 1840    Amer. Advt. in  A. Walker Beauty 		(U.S. ed.)	 p. ix  				This may seem a wide assertion. But it is no less true. 1878    Sporting Times 28 Dec. 5/3  				Hammersmith... Its principal street is called the Broadway, from the ‘wide’ people who frequent it. 1895    Daily News 3 Sept. 7/5  				Prices asked are very wide, and are beyond the values that merchants are disposed to give. 1902    O. Wister Virginian xiii. 148  				Wide females in pink. 1928    S. Lewis Man who knew Coolidge  i. 62  				I certainly did feel primed for one high wide and fancy evening. 1977    New Yorker 11 July 37/1  				He's such a wide person. He has so much of everything.  b.  British slang. Shrewd, sharp-witted; cunning; knowledgeable or aware, esp. regarding situations which may be turned (dishonestly) to one's advantage; skilled in sharp practice, engaging in shady dealings. Cf. wide boy n. at  Compounds 2, wide awake adj. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > cunning > 			[adjective]		 > astute oldOE witterc1100 pratc1175 smeighc1200 fellc1300 yap13.. far-castinga1387 parlousc1390 advisee?a1400 politic?a1439 astucec1550 political1577 astute1611 knowing1664 shrewda1684 sharp1697 leery1718 peery1721 fly1811 canny1816 flash1818 astucious1823 varmint1829 chickaleary1839 wide1879 snide1883 varminty1907 crazy like (or as) a fox1935 1869    Hunt's Yachting Mag. Apr. 188  				I recollect well that many years ago in the Royal Navy, that when any youthful denizen of the cockpit, was detected in an abortive attempt at weathering any of his messmates a shout would be raised to this effect, ‘Avast there Master Wide-o, let's have none of your scrimp shanking.’]			 1879    Macmillan's Mag. Oct. 502/1  				I got in company with some of the widest (cleverest) people in London. 1891    Daily News 24 Feb. 2/1  				Well, she was tipsy; but she was very ‘wide’. 1897    A. R. Marshall ‘Pomes’ from Pink 'Un 8  				Although she was quite the lady In deportment and dress, Were you asked as a wide-'un, ‘Shady?’ You would have to answer, ‘Yes’. 1928    E. Wallace Gunner xxviii. 226  				You can handle these swells, Danty, and you're wide enough to keep yourself out of trouble. 1938    F. D. Sharpe Sharpe of Flying Squad i. 13  				Underworld men and women..refer to themselves as ‘wide people’ or ‘one of us’. They're a colourful, rascally lot these ‘wide 'uns’. 1956    T. Huddleston Naught for your Comfort ii. 28  				He must become a ‘tsotsi’, a cosh-boy, a wide-guy—because at least there's excitement that way, while it lasts. 1976    T. Murphy Sanctuary Lamp  ii. ii. 77  				No, babies are wide, Har; babies are shrewd. Well, they aren't fools. 1998    I. Welsh Filth 45  				He must have minded of the boy but he's no letting on. As wide as Leith Walk, that cunt.  14.   a.  Cricket. Of a fielding position: lying further from the line of the stumps than usual. Chiefly premodifying the name of a more established fielding position such as mid on, slip, third man, etc. ΚΠ 1883    Manch. Courier 23 Jan. 3/2  				He gave a chance..to extra wide mid-off. 1908    Times 3 Sept. 5/1  				King..was splendidly caught by Marshal, standing at wide slip, close to the wicket. 1935    Times 28 May 7/1  				[He] welcomed every opportunity to drive the ball past cover-point's right hand or to turn it too thin for a wide long-leg. 1996    Times of India 22 Feb. 23/2  				Brian McMillan's classic, diving back from a wide first slip to dismiss Roger Twose. 2015    S. Broad Broadside v. 124  				Mo took a wonderful diving catch down at wide third man, of all places, to win the match.  b.  In various team sports (esp. Association Football): designating a player who typically plays at or near the sides of the pitch or field; (also) designating such a playing position. ΚΠ 1885    Boston Sunday Globe 27 Sept. 3/3  				Fraser, third defence field, is..as efficient with the stick as with the pen. He is a wide player, but one of the most dangerous men on the team to leave uncovered. 1893    Bristol Mercury 30 Oct. 3/1  				The wide position assumed by the threequarters brought down upon offending members the..rebuke of a committee man. 1931    Times 26 Oct. 5/1  				Stone failed to convert this try from a wide position. 1972    Princeton Alumni Weekly 3 Oct. 31/1  				The wide defenders try to force the pass receivers inside to the ‘under’ coverage. 1997    A. Wade Positional Play Midfield iv. 26  				The concentration of large numbers of players in mid-field was achieved..by withdrawing one or both wide attackers. 2000    Northern Echo 6 May 25  				The Quakers are without wide midfielder Neil Wainwright. 2014    H. Redknapp Man walks onto Pitch 		(2015)	 v. 297  				The forwards would all disappear, Henry to the left, Bergkamp upfield, Robert Pirès and Freddie Ljungberg to wide midfield. Phrases   at widest: at or to the broadest or fullest point or extent. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > 			[phrase]		 > extended to the widest at widesta1616 a1616    W. Shakespeare Tempest 		(1623)	  i. i. 57  				Though euery drop of water sweare against it, And gape at widst to glut  him.       View more context for this quotation 1670    J. Ogilby Africa 284  				Biledulgerid, or Numidia, reckons in length six hundred miles, in breadth where at widest, three and fifty. 1671    J. Torbuck tr.  in  Ημέραι παρ᾽ Ημέρας iii. 62  				By stretching out of both arms at widest, he shews forth most gracious proffers of embracing both Jews and Gentiles. 1769    T. Gray Let. 18 Oct. in  Poems 		(1775)	 354  				It is nine miles long; and at widest under a mile in breadth. 1833    R. Chambers  & W. Chambers Gazetteer Scotl. 		(new ed.)	 I. 253/2  				It extends ten miles in length from north-west to south-east, by a breadth of about four miles at widest. 1841    Penny Cycl. XX. 150/2  				Every algebraical result is of the form a+b√(–1) at widest, or may be reduced to that form. 1896    R. Ward Rec. Big Game 270/1  				Girth at widest over hump... 9 [ft.] 4 [in.]. 1942    A. Stone Fruitflies of Genus Anastrepha (Misc. Publ. U.S. Dept. Agric. No. 439) 15  				Ovipositor slender, the tip at widest about 0.07 mm. wide. 2009    Jrnl. Paleontol. 83 932/1  				Prothorax heart-shaped, embossed, 7.3 mm long, 6.9 at widest. Compounds C1.    a.    (a)   Parasynthetic.Some of the more established compounds of this type are treated separately. ΚΠ 1567    A. Golding tr.  Ovid Metamorphosis 		(new ed.)	  xiv. f. 184v  				Vp the hygh wyde windowde house in saying so, shee ran [L. patulis iniit tectum..fenestris]. a1616    W. Shakespeare Tempest 		(1623)	  i. i. 54  				This wide-chopt-rascall. 1665    R. Brathwait Comment Two Tales Chaucer 122  				She was gap-tooth'd, or wide-spaced. 1680    London Gaz. No. 1527/4  				Open wide-kneed Breeches. 1725    A. Pope tr.  Homer Odyssey III.  xiii. 506  				At his side a wretched scrip was hung, Wide-patch'd, and knotted to a twisted thong. 1788    W. Cowper Gratitude 11  				This wheel-footed studying chair,..Wide-elbow'd, and wadded with hair. 1807    J. Barlow Columbiad  iii. 131  				The wide-beak'd hawk, that now beholds me die, Soon with his cowering train my flesh shall tear. 1830    W. Scott Ivanhoe 		(new ed.)	 I. i. 7  				Short-stemmed, wide-branched oaks. 1838    E. B. Barrett Seraphim & Other Poems 189  				Wide-petalled plants. 1848    T. A. Buckley tr.  Homer Iliad 23  				The wide-wayed city of the Trojans. 1856    J. G. Whittier Poet. Wks. 		(1898)	 353/1  				Pacific rolls his waves a-land, From many a wide-lapped port and land-locked bay. 1874    J. H. Parker Introd. Study Gothic Archit. 		(ed. 4)	  i. i. 11  				Wide-jointed masonry is a usual characteristic of the eleventh century in England and Normandy. a1878    G. G. Scott Lect. Mediæval Archit. 		(1879)	 I. 65  				Wide-spanned arches. 1903    R. Kipling Five Nations 73  				Beside wide-banked Ouse. 1990    D. Ackerman Nat. Hist. Senses i. 14  				The wide-spirited poet Lucretius. 2011    N.Y. Rev. Bks. 10 Mar. 26/2  				Two long, wide-bladed knives.  (b)     wide-arched adj. ΚΠ 1820    J. Keats Lamia  ii, in  Lamia & Other Poems 34  				The glowing banquet-room shone with wide-arched grace. 2013    Manly 		(Austral.)	 Daily 		(Nexis)	 18 Mar. 3  				They loved the 5m-high ceilings, the original floorboards and wide-arched hallway.   wide-bellied adj. ΚΠ 1594    J. Stockwood tr.  L. Daneau Fruitfull Comm. Twelue Small Prophets (Jonah i. 17) 181  				The kinde of Whales, who are of so huge a greatnes, and so wide bellied [L. tam capacis ventris], that they can swallow downe whole men. 1807    tr.  A. von Kotzebue Subterraneous Passage in  Pastor's Daughter 		(ed. 2)	 III. i. 26  				He was scarcely able to drag his short bulky legs, after his wide bellied body. 1921    W. de la Mare Veil & Other Poems 6  				Dipped the wide-bellied boat. 1980    Jrnl. Royal Soc. Med. 73 7  				A wide-bellied, ungainly but functional ambulance. 2009    Herald Sun 		(Austral.)	 		(Nexis)	 16 Aug. 22  				We clamber across wide-bellied boats being hand-loaded with sacks of garlic and apples.   wide-brimmed adj. ΚΠ 1819    Port Folio Apr. 320  				They wear a round and very wide brimmed hat, tied under the chin. 1918    J. W. Gerard Face to Face with Kaiserism xv. 180  				An actress who wore a wide-brimmed hat. 2005    P. D. James Lighthouse  ii. ii. 94  				A black wide-brimmed trilby worn with a certain rakishness.   wide-legged adj. ΚΠ 1802    H. Neuman New Dict. Spanish & Eng. Langs. I  				Pernabierto, open or wide legged. 1938    R. Graves Coll. Poems 28  				The wide-legged robin with his breast aglow. 2006    New Yorker 6 Feb. 22/3  				Three sailors cartwheel onto a New York street corner with their white wide-legged pants and smushed caps.   wide-lipped adj. ΚΠ 1752    J. Hill Gen. Nat. Hist. III. 147  				The great, wide-lipped, ear Murex, of Rumphius. 1837    C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xxxvii. 409  				Those wide-lipped crystal vessels..in which chemists..measure out their liquid drugs. 2015    Korea Times 		(Nexis)	 19 Nov.  				It is easier to smell the wine when drinking in a wide-lipped glass.   wide-margined adj. ΚΠ 1809    Monthly Rev. June 217  				The hot-pressed and wide-margined volumes, which have begun of late to obtrude themselves even into the study of professional men. 1973    M. E. Wharton  & R. W. Barbour Trees & Shrubs of Kentucky 225  				Leaves thick and lustrous..; petioles wide-margined. 2015    Wesleyan Argus 		(Nexis)	 16 Feb. (Sports section) 1  				Siracusa's return helped the Cardinals to wide-margined victories over SUNY Oswego, 33–12, and Hunter College, 33–14.   wide-necked adj. ΚΠ 1746    W. Lewis Course Pract. Chem.  i. xiii. 156  				Put nine ounces of borax in powder into a wide necked glass retort. 1880    J. Dunbar Pract. Papermaker 69  				A wide-necked glass-stoppered bottle. 1908    W. B. Coley in  W. W. Keen Surgery IV. liii. 29  				In very large umbilical hernia with a wide-necked sac, a loop of intestine may be irreducible without strangulation occurring. 2005    Metro 15 June 		(London ed.)	 23/2  				Then came a foie gras and chicken liver mousse in a little wide-necked Kilner jar.   wide-shouldered adj. ΚΠ 1772    W. Walsh Life Virgil in  J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Wks. 		(new ed.)	 I. 62  				He was..tall and wide shouldered. 1935    R. Kipling Two Forewords 19  				But thou, O Nakhoda, art young and wide-shouldered. 1973    T. Pynchon Gravity's Rainbow  i. 127  				A few women in clinking boots and wide-shouldered swagger coats, but no children. 2015    J. Meno Marvel & Wonder 291  				The horse was a muscular-looking one, wide-shouldered, stark white.   wide-skirted adj. ΚΠ 1608    W. Shakespeare King Lear i. 59  				With shady forrests, and wide skirted  meades.       View more context for this quotation 1838    C. Dickens Oliver Twist II. xxxvi. 287  				The coat was wide-skirted. 2015    Sunday Tel. 		(Nexis)	 13 Sept. 7  				Dressed in wide-skirted gowns made of Indian calico, the fashionable ladies..would come calling on Mr Alexander Pope.   wide-sleeved adj. ΚΠ 1581    A. Gilby Pleasaunt Dialogue sig. M3  				The great wide sleeued gowne, commaunded to the Ministers, & the charge to weare those sleeues vpon the armes, be the weather neuer so hote. 1760    World Displayed IX. 78  				Those of a superior rank have long drawers, a wide sleeved kind of a shirt that hangs over them, and a waistcoat. 1836    J. F. Davis Chinese I. ix. 330  				The host..accommodated the whole number of ten or twelve with handsome wide-sleeved spencers, all of the most costly furs. 1926    D. H. Lawrence David viii. 63  				Takes off striped coat, or wide-sleeved tunic. 2011    Herald 		(Glasgow)	 		(Nexis)	 20 June 14  				To create a simple summer look contrast the white jacket with this wide-sleeved green dress.   wide-throated adj. ΚΠ 1591    R. Percyvall Bibliotheca Hispanica Dict. at Papado  				Wide throated. a1627    T. Middleton Mayor of Quinborough 		(1661)	  i. i. 5  				Will that wide throated Beast, the multitude, Never leave bellowing? 1791    W. Cowper tr.  Homer Iliad in  Iliad & Odyssey I.  x. 8  				Wide-throated war calamitous. 1883    Leisure Hour 312/2  				The characters of the Eurypharynx (wide-throated pelican fish) are so divided. 2004    B. Powning Hatbox Lett. ii. 21  				Both of them beneath their summer quilt, listening to the wide-throated roar of river rain.   wide-windowed adj. ΚΠ 1567    A. Golding tr.  Ovid Metamorphosis 		(new ed.)	  xiv. f. 184v  				Vp the hygh wyde windowde house in saying so, shee ran [L. patulis iniit tectum..fenestris]. 1651    C. Hotham Petition & Argument 11  				The Laws were then (as the Mosaical Law) like those wide-window'd Nets our national Statutes prescribe for hindering the destruction of the young fry of fish. 1826    Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Aug. 258/2  				It would be extremely pleasant to breakfast in that wide-windowed room on the ground-floor. 1870    J. R. Lowell Cathedral 20  				A life wide-windowed, shining all abroad, Or curtains drawn to shield from sight profane. 1970    Daily Tel. 30 Apr. 17  				A wide-windowed bar parlour. 2015    Sydney Morning Herald 		(Nexis)	 4 July 8  				Couples sunken into romance among plush leather sofas while taking in the wide-windowed nighttime views of a swollen D94.  b.   With nouns, forming adjectives with the sense ‘having, involving, or relating to a (or the) wide ——’.   wide-head adj. ΚΠ 1870    W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. IV 371  				The wide-head oaks. 1990    Pop. Sci. Apr. 17/1  				It can be attached with staples.., wide-head nails, or glue. 2014    Plymouth Herald 		(Nexis)	 13 Feb. 28  				In the bathroom is a modern white suite comprising a bath with a wide-head shower above, a wc and a feature wash hand basin.   wide-row adj. ΚΠ 1809    Agric. Mag. Oct. 235  				After this hoeing,..the wide row wheat grew away most luxuriantly. 1821    W. Cobbett Rural Rides in  Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 1 Dec. 1323  				The advantages of the wide-row culture. 1960    W. L. Anderson Making Land produce Useful Wildlife 8 		(caption)	  				Wide-row corn [has] been flooded in this duck field. 2015    S. Burnett 		(Queensland)	 Times & Rural Weekly 		(Nexis)	 2 Oct. 17  				Even wide row wheat can give rise to more interrow weed germinations due to lack of crop competition.   wide-world adj. ΚΠ 1851    J. Ruskin Stones of Venice I. App.  xv. 385  				He [sc. Rubens] has neither cloister breeding nor boudoir breeding,..but he has an open sky and wide-world breeding in him. 1883    Cent. Mag. Mar. 720/2  				Gambetta wished the exhibition to redound abroad to the glory of France, and to be an agency for gaining a wide-world sympathy for the Republic. 2007    G. R. Edgerton Columbia Hist. Amer. Television viii. 291  				Arledge did institute a ‘wide world’ approach, but his efforts to further internationalize ABC News actually improved the quality of the programming rather than lowering standards as his detractors had predicted.  C2.     wide-angled adj. = wide-angle adj.   (in various senses). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > camera > parts and accessories of camera > 			[adjective]		 > types of lens flat field1841 wide-angle1865 slow1867 wide-angled1873 fast1877 rapid1878 fish-eye1882 sharp1883 symmetrical1890 telephotographic1891 telephotographic lens1891 narrow-angle1893 stigmatic1896 tele-negative1898 tele-positive1898 bloomed1945 soft1945 wide-field1950 1873    E. F. Moelling tr.  H. Vogel Photographer's Pocket Reference-bk. & Dict. 12  				Steinheil has made wide-angled aplanatic lenses. 1961    Press-Courier 		(Oxnard, Calif.)	 6 Sept. 36/6  				Some day we must come back with proper camera equipment for we want a wide-angled shot of that entrance for a Christmas card we have in mind. 1977    Nursing Mirror 18 Aug. 4/2  				Convex wide-angled mirrors have been installed at bedsides so that patients, who lie flat on their backs most of the time, can have an uninterrupted view of the outside world. 2000    A. Primavesi Sacred Gaia ii. 20  				This wide-angled view reveals the structural fragility of another foundation of traditional theology. 2011    Winnipeg Free Press 18 Jan.  a2/1  				The photographer joked he had left his wide-angled lens at home.   wide-aperture adj. Photography and Optics designating a lens or optical instrument (esp. a telescope) having a large maximum relative aperture.Wide-aperture lenses typically have larger diameters than other lenses. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > optical instruments > lens > 			[adjective]		 > types of lenses convex?a1560 planoconvex1665 concavo-convex1677 convexo-concave1693 strong1732 aplanatic1799 periscopic1803 omphaloptic1819 polyzonal1823 shallow1837 first-order1846 periscopical1846 orthoscopic1853 rectilinear1874 overcorrected1875 sphero-cylindrical1881 wide-aperture1882 afocal1887 apochromatic1887 anastigmatic1890 telecentric1892 photovisual1899 aspherical1922 aspheric1923 multifocal1928 plano1944 demagnifying1959 1882    Eng. Mech. 17 Mar. 25/3  				The view..that wide-aperture objectives produced confused images. 1966    D. G. Brandon Mod. Techniques Metallogr. i. 57  				With a wide-aperture telescope..there is no loss of brightness on magnification. 2015    Philippines Daily Inquirer 		(Nexis)	 21 May  				Its f/2.0 wide-aperture lens lets users quickly and easily capture beautiful, high-resolution photos with zero shutter-lag.   wide area network  n.				 [after local area network n. at local adj. and n. Compounds]			 Computing and Telecommunications a telecommunications or computer network that operates over a large geographical area (typically one having a radius greater than one kilometre); abbreviated WLAN; cf. local area network n. at local adj. and n. Compounds. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > network > 			[noun]		 > wide area network wide area network1975 WAN1983 1975    Proc. Royal Soc. A. 345 507  				The result is a wide area network of interactive terminals, each able to confer with the other. 1988    Computer Weekly 1 Sept. 10/3  				DEC to DEC links across a wide area network will use the Microserver with new Dec-router software. 2014    Crossroads 		(Manitoba)	 27 June 26/3  				Park West School Division is looking at improvements to its Wide Area Network (WAN) through the installation of a fiber optic infrastructure.   wide-armed adj. having a wide arm or arms; having the arms opened wide; (figurative) welcoming. ΚΠ 1822    J. Wilson Lights & Shadows Sc. Life 305  				Beneath the shadow of that wide-armed sycamore. 1898    G. Meredith Odes French Hist. 27  				With view of wide-armed heaven. 1914    M. D. Sullivan Goddess of Dawn xi. 146  				She called Arthur for a few moments to a seat beside the wide-armed wicker chair in which she lounged. 2014    New Yorker 19 May 92/2  				‘In the Light of what We Know’ is what Salman Rushdie once called an ‘everything novel.’ It is wide-armed, hospitable, disputatious, worldly, cerebral.   wide-band adj. Electronics and Telecommunications of or relating to a band of electromagnetic frequencies lying within a broad range; esp. of or relating to a transmission system employing a wide bandwidth; frequently contrasted with narrowband adj. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > 			[adjective]		 > band of frequencies wide-band1931 vestigial side band1940 1931    Proc. IRE 19 716  				The paper of the evening on ‘Fundamental Requirements for Wide Band Transmission’ was presented by John K. Hilliard. 1935    Wireless Engineer 12 251/1  				A means of examining the behaviour of wide-band amplifiers when supplied with transient input waves. 1967    E. Chambers Photolitho-offset iv. 42  				Although this ideal is not fully realised the fact remains that very acceptable results can be obtained using either wide-band (trichromatic) or narrow-cut filters. 1996    Accoustical Imaging 22 70  				In general, images obtained by using wide-band signals are of better quality..than those obtained by means of narrow-band signals. 2010    RadioUser Apr. 15/3  				Eddie..would like to know the most useful wideband scanner to purchase there that would also be good for use in the UK.   wide boy  n. British colloquial a boy or man who lives by his wits, esp. one skilled in dishonest practices or involved in petty criminal activities; cf. sense  13b. ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > lack of principle or integrity > 			[noun]		 > dishonesty > dishonest person shondc725 makeshift1554 roundabout1605 fraudsman1613 trickster1711 bug1785 fly-by-night1796 twister1834 rigger1859 shyster1877 crook1879 heel1914 wide boy1937 1933    E. Williams et al.  Friday Thirteenth 		(transcribed from film)	  				You're talking to one of the widest boys ever walked in a pair of shoes.]			 1937    R. Westerby Wide Boys never Work 232  				Jim was turning, or had already turned, into a Smart Aleck, a Wide Boy, a despiser of the Mugs who worked. 1976    J. O'Connor Eleventh Commandment iii. 38  				All the wide boys thought I had gone mad when they saw me in khaki. 2012    Steam World Aug. 48/1  				The wide boys of the market had evidently seen a naïve lad from the provinces coming! ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > 			[noun]		 > coat > types of > overcoat greatcoat1647 out-coat1684 wide coat1698 big coat1720 overcoat1802 trusty1804 jemmy1836 reefer1870 bridge coat1915 orchestration1939 lead sheet1942 1698    J. Dunton Let. 		(Rawl. D.71)	 f. 23  				When night came he borrowed his landlords cloake, or wide coate, to goe abroad in for feare of cold. 1746    G. Williamson Diary 25 Oct. in  Arthuret & Langtown 		(1997)	 70  				Cloth for a wide Coat from Mr. Raincock. 1760    Ann. Reg. 1759 Characters 355/1  				He saw a person come out of Aram's house, who had a wide coat on, with the cape about his head. 1825    J. T. Brockett Gloss. North Country Words  				Wide-coat, an upper or great coat.   wide chord adj. chiefly Aeronautics designating an aerofoil (in later use esp. a blade of a propeller, rotor, or turbine fan) having a relatively wide chord (chord n.1 6); (also) designating a device equipped with such aerofoils. ΚΠ 1917    W. B. Stout Acquiring Wings 33  				A certain number of ribs..are constructed without support other than the spars..and by spacers or extra wing spars on wide chord wings. 1956    Sci. News Let. 24 Mar. 185/3  				High-speed airplanes will need very thin, comparatively wide chord wings for best supersonic cruising. 1993    Professional Engin. Dec. 1/3  				The wide-chord fan designed by Rolls-Royce has been a major contributor to the company's increasing share of the civil engine market. 2001    Flying Nov. 72 		(caption)	  				The Williams engine has a one-piece fan with wide chord blades.   wide-cut adj. 		 (a) (of a cutting machine, esp. a mower) having a wide cutting area;		 (b) (of fuel, esp. a blend of gasoline and kerosene used as aviation fuel) composed of components whose boiling points span a broad range of temperatures; (also) designating the distillation of such fuel. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > extracted or refined oil > 			[adjective]		 > refined or distilled mineral oil cracked1884 wide-cut1888 stripped1931 re-refined1932 steam-cracked1962 1888    Buyer's Guide 		(Farm Implement News Company)	 116 		(advt.)	  				Of the many points of superiority which our wide-cut mowers have over all other mowing machines, the most important is our Curved Cutter-Bar, Suspension Spring and Compound Lever. 1946    Industr. & Engin. Chem. 		(Industr. ed.)	 38 139 		(caption)	  				Aviation gasoline from Southwest Louisiana wide-cut gas oil by catalytic cracking plus hydrogenation. 1958    Chambers's Techn. Dict. 1027/2  				Wide-cut fuel, low octane petrol (gasoline) obtained from wide-cut distillation used in turbojets in order to conserve kerosene. 1989    Res. & Devel. in Agric. 6 45/2  				Wide cut mowers will become increasingly popular. 2012    E. Dahlquist Biomass as Energy Source 191  				Jet B is a wide-cut fuel, which has a more diverse hydrocarbon blend with chain lengths from about C4 to C16.   wide-eared adj. having wide ears; having the ears wide open; listening intently. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > 			[adjective]		 > listening > listening intently whole-eared1681 wide-eared1866 the mind > attention and judgement > attention > notice, observation > 			[adjective]		 > listening attentively listeninga1275 attending1599 whole-eared1681 on or upon the listen1788 wide-eared1866 ear-bending1912 1618    M. Baret Hipponomie  iii. 3  				If he [sc. your horse] be somewhat bangled, or wide eared so they be sharp, it is a signe of toughnesse. 1684    London Gaz. No. 1976/4  				A black Coach Mare.., a little wide Eared. 1866    C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. iv. 149  				The boys listened, wide-eyed and wide-eared. 2009    Ottawa Citizen 		(Nexis)	 8 Nov.  a6  				Imagine..that the royal motorcade breaks down right in front of your house and you answer your door to find a wide-eared king-to-be on the other side.   wide-eyed adj. having wide eyes; having the eyes wide open; gazing intently; (in extended use) surprised, amazed, naive. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > expectation > feeling of wonder, astonishment > 			[adjective]		 > wide-eyed wide-eyed1789 pop-eyed1906 the mind > attention and judgement > attention > notice, observation > 			[adjective]		 > observing closely narrow-eyed1600 examining1649 sharp-eyed1672 wide-eyed1789 whole-eyed1911 the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > eye > 			[adjective]		 > by size, shape, etc. > having goggle-eyedc1384 well-eyed1483 pink-eyed1519 hollow-eyeda1529 small-eyed1555 great-eyed1558 bird-eyed1564 out-eyed1570 large-eyed1575 full-eyed1581 bright-eyed1590 wall-eyed1590 beetle-eyed1594 fire-eyed?1594 young-eyed1600 open-eyed1601 soft-eyed1606 narrow-eyed1607 broad-eyed?1611 saucer-eyed1612 ox-eyed1621 pig-eyed1655 glare-eyed1683 pit-eyed1696 dove-eyed1717 laughing-eyed1784 almond1786 wide-eyed1789 moon-eyed1790 big-eyed1792 gooseberry-eyed1796 red-eyed1800 unsealed1800 screw-eyed1810 starry-eyed1818 pinkie-eyed1824 pop-eyed1830 bead-eyed1835 fishy-eyed1836 almond-eyed1849 boopic1854 sharp-set1865 bug-eyed1872 beady-eyed1873 bias-eyed1877 blank-eyed1881 gape-eyed1889 glass-eyed1889 stone-eyed1890 pie-eyed1900 slitty-eyed1908 steely-eyed1964 megalopic1985 1789    T. Holcroft tr.  King Frederick II Let. in  tr.  King Frederick II Posthumous Wks. VI. 539  				Ignorance, wide eyed [Fr. l'ignorant], believes 'tis found In some uncouth, unmeaning sound. 1855    C. Kingsley Argonauts in  Heroes  i. 80  				The boy listened wide-eyed. 1894    Forum 		(N.Y.)	 Feb. 717  				Madison's..wide-eyed prudence in counsel. 1897    H. Tennyson Alfred Ld. Tennyson: Mem. I. xviii. 369  				[Quoting Ld. Tennyson] The wide-eyed wonder of a babe has a grandeur in it. 1923    D. H. Lawrence Birds, Beasts & Flowers 		(N.Y. ed.)	 101  				The human soul is fated to wide-eyed responsibility In life. 1983    L. Deighton Berlin Game ix. 95  				You ask him all those wide-eyed innocent questions about making profits from cheap labour. 2014    London Evening Standard 9 Oct. 		(West End Final ed.)	 28/2  				I just feel like a wide-eyed kid and that's not how I want to walk into the Olympic Games.   wide-gab  n. Scottish (now rare) the angler,  Lophius piscatorius. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > superorder Paracanthopterygii > order Lophiiformes (anglers) > 			[noun]		 > family Lophiidae > lophius piscatorius (angler) frogfish1598 frog1601 sea-fisher1601 sea-frog1601 friar1603 toad-fish1612 catfish1620 sea-angler1653 devil fish1666 monkfish1666 nass-fish1666 angler1776 pocket-fish1796 kettle-mawa1798 wide-gab1807 anglerfish1854 round robin1880 dragon- 1807    Scots Mag. Sept. 646/1  				The people there call them Wide-gabs, from the uncommon size of their mouth. 1854    Fraser's Mag. Aug. 203/2  				When caught in a net,..the appetite of the Wide Gab is no whit discouraged; and it generally devours some of its fellow-prisoners. 1991    K. P. N. Shuker Extraordinary Animals Worldwide iii. 28  				This is Lophius piscatorius, whose repulsive form has earned it many weird names, including goosefish, frogfish, fishing-frog, sea-devil, wide-gab, and..the angler fish.   wide game  n. 		 (a) Sport (chiefly Rugby) a style of play that involves moving the ball into those areas of the pitch nearest to the sides, in order to stretch the play;		 (b) (esp. in the Scout movement) any outdoor game played over a wide area and involving a large number of participants. ΚΠ 1910    Evening Tel. & Post 		(Dundee)	 7 Feb. 5/5  				Falkirk played the wide game, usually most discomforting to half backs, giving them no end of running about. 1936    Boys' Life Aug. 20/4  				We played games: Wide Games with smugglers and G-men over large areas, and Close Games with Patrols pitted against one another on the camp playground. 1938    Iowa Recorder 23 Nov. 6/1  				The afternoon was spent in pacing and mapping practice, ‘wide game’ period, proper use of knife, hatchet, cooking aids and types of fires. 1985    Times 25 Nov. 25/3  				Scottish controlled the match by winning most of the loose ball, and they played the wide game, knowing the risks were minimal against this raw opposition. 2015    Age 		(Melbourne)	 		(Nexis)	 14 Feb. 10  				The artworks..are clues in a huge ‘wide game’ to be played across the central business district by 8000 Scouts on Sunday morning.   wide gauge  n. Railways = broad gauge n.; chiefly attributive. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > railway system or organization > 			[noun]		 > track > permanent way > space between rails > gauge wide gauge1837 narrow gauge1839 gauge1841 broad gauge1844 society > travel > rail travel > railway system or organization > 			[adjective]		 > types of track or rail slow1799 fast1814 fish-jointed1855 prismoidal1874 broad-gauged1881 monorail1885 unballasted1887 sleepered1894 monoline1902 wide gauge1982 1837    Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 1 325/1  				There is nothing in the wide gauge which involves any considerably increased weight in the engines. 1982    S. G. Duff Parting of Ways iv. 43  				We all boarded the train for Moscow, changing onto the wide-gauge railway at the Soviet frontier. 2015    Times Central Asia 		(Nexis)	 25 Nov.  				It would also resolve the problem of the incompatibility between Central Asia's wide-gauge track system and China's standard-gauge system.   wide-handed adj. having or resembling a wide hand or hands; (figurative) open-handed, generous. ΚΠ 1600    N. Breton Pasquils Fooles-cap 		(rev. ed.)	 sig. B4v  				In the aime of Wisdomes eye, Wide handed Wits will euer shoote awry. 1638    R. Brathwait Psalmes David  iv. civ. 203  				This sea, so great wide-handed deep. 1783    tr.  C. Linnaeus Syst. Veg. II. 725  				M[omordica] pomes angled tubercled, leaves smooth wide-handed. 1845    New Monthly Belle Assemblée Dec. 336/1  				His general intelligence, proved skill, and wide-handed benevolence. 2013    F. Burton  & S. M. Katz Under Fire xiii. 137  				The situation warranted a razor-sharp slice and not a wide-handed slap.   wide-hearted adj. generous, magnanimous; open-hearted. ΚΠ 1802    S. T. Coleridge Coll. Lett. 		(1956)	 II. 887  				Would..any warm & wide-hearted man marry at all? 1917    Blackwood's Mag. Nov. 677/1  				Ladies..narrow in their interests,..but wide-hearted. 2014    Pioneer 		(India)	 		(Nexis)	 29 Jan.  				The essence of this principle is a large and wide-hearted toleration in which differences are recognised and given their due.   wide-heartedness  n. the fact or quality of being wide-hearted; generosity, magnanimity. ΚΠ 1848    J. Thomson  & P. Fairbairn tr.  E. W. Hengstenberg Comm. Psalms 211  				Love of strife appears as the outward expression of wide-heartedness. 1908    Contemp. Rev. Dec. 728  				This practical devotion, this liberal wide-heartedness. 2012    Contemp. Sociol. 41 727/2  				The interplay of religion and evolution will..replace intramural..rejections with moral wide-heartedness.   wide-leafed adj. 		(also wide-leaved)	 		 (a) having a wide leaf or leaves;		 (b) (of a hat) broad-brimmed; cf. leafed adj. 3; (now rare). ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[adjective]		 > hat > having a brim > broad-brimmed broad-brimmed1606 wide-leafed1779 brimmy1896 1779    P. M. Freneau in  U.S. Mag. Aug. 356  				A wide-leaf'd table stood on either side. 1805    M. Lewis Jrnl. 3 June in  Jrnls. Lewis & Clark Exped. 		(1987)	 IV. 250  				They..found it a boald running stream..containing much timber in it's bottom, consisting of the narrow and wide leafed cottonwood. 1824    M. J. Quin Visit to Spain 		(ed. 2)	 iii. 41  				A wide-leafed hat turned up full at the sides. 1855    J. L. Motley Rise Dutch Republic III.  vi. vii. 608  				He wore a wide-leaved..hat of dark felt. 1937    Weekly Irish Times 14 Aug. 9/3  				Women visitors came in graceful summer frocks..and wide leafed hats. 1949    S. O'Casey Cock-a-Doodle-Dandy 		(1985)	 338  				He wears a wide-leafed collar. 2010    Star Tribune 		(Minneapolis)	 		(Nexis)	 19 May 1 d  				Comfrey, a wide-leafed perennial used in ancient Rome and Greece to heal wounds.   wide-meshed adj. having or resembling a mesh or net that has wide gaps or interstices; (figurative) having a broad scope; loosely defined. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > fact or condition of being transverse > intersection > 			[adjective]		 > like a net or network netty1587 network1599 meshed1616 retiform1636 reticulate1658 reticulated1665 verricular1706 reticulary1717 retiformous1718 reticular1722 wide-meshed1724 netted1791 reticulating1795 reticuled1824 reticulose1826 1724    R. Hall Observ. Methods used in Holland vii. 22  				Women..riddle it [sc. the Seed]..through a wide meshed Riddle, and sever the Seed from the Leaves, Stalks, and grosser Part of the Filth, which was before mixed with it. 1870    H. Power tr.  S. Stricker Man. Human & Compar. Histol. I. 252  				The transversely striated muscle of the endocardium of the ventricle occurs..as a wide-meshed network of muscular bundles. 1938    Dial. Notes 6 626  				Professor A. H. Marckwardt..has begun a wide-meshed survey of the Great Lakes region and the Ohio River valley. 1980    Eng. World-wide 1  i. 28  				Unfortunately..his survey is even more wide-meshed than Orton's. 2000    L. Sage Bad Blood 133  				The pattern of farm days was loose and wide-meshed, there was a desultory quality about it. 2013    Southland Times 		(N.Z.)	 		(Nexis)	 22 Oct. 7  				Push puree through a large wide-meshed sieve to catch pips and skins.   wide-minded adj. tolerant or liberal in one's views or outlook; having an open mind; broad-minded. ΚΠ 1850    G. Gilfillan Second Gallery Lit. Portraits 164  				He is too proud for a Radical, and too wide-minded for a Tory. 1883    A. Barratt Physical Metempiric Pref. p. xx  				In politics his sympathies were liberal and wide-minded. 1914    R. B. Tollinton Clement of Alexandria II. xx. 273  				Wide-minded teachers, who have the power to discern affinities and to greet the ally in disguise. 2014    Arab Times 		(Nexis)	 22 July  				[Egypt] has become wide-minded under the tenure of President Abdul Fattah el-Sisi.   wide-mindedness  n. the fact or quality of being wide-minded; broad-mindedness. ΚΠ 1865    Dundee Courier & Argus 22 Aug.  				Call you this wide-mindedness? 1927    A. H. McNeile Introd. to New Test. 103  				The former was interested in the wide-mindedness and kindly spirit shown by Gentile Christians in the young Church at Antioch. 2003    A. Vigneron in  D. R. Foster  & J. W. Koterski Two Wings Catholic Thought 105  				I would underscore the need to cultivate in our students a ‘wide-mindedness’, a readiness to stretch themselves beyond the usual boundaries of their intellectual capital.   wideout  n. American Football = wide receiver n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > American football > 			[noun]		 > types of player side tackle1809 nose guard1852 rusher1877 goalkicker1879 quarterback1879 runner1880 quarter1883 full back1884 left guard1884 snap-back1887 snapper-back1887 running back1891 tackle1891 defensive end1897 guard1897 interferer1897 receiver1897 defensive back1898 defensive tackle1900 safety man1901 ball carrier1902 defensive lineman1902 homebrew1903 offensive lineman1905 lineman1907 returner1911 signal caller1915 rover1916 interference1920 punt returner1926 pass rusher1928 tailback1930 safety1931 blocker1935 faker1938 scatback1946 linesman1947 flanker1953 platoon player1953 corner-back1955 pulling guard1955 split end1955 return man1957 slot-back1959 strong safety1959 wide receiver1960 line-backer1961 pocket passer1963 tight end1963 run blocker1967 wideout1967 blitzer1968 1967    Laurel 		(Mississippi)	 Leader-Call 5 Dec. 11/2  				Miami now employs only one wideout, split end Jim Cox. 1987    Gridiron Pro! No. 5. 18/1  				Wideout Jerry Rice sparkled with six passes for 154 yards. 2003    Black Men Oct. 20  				A quality wideout for QB David Carr to throw to.   wide receiver  n. American Football a pass receiver who stands several yards to the side of an offensive formation; cf. wideout n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > American football > 			[noun]		 > types of player side tackle1809 nose guard1852 rusher1877 goalkicker1879 quarterback1879 runner1880 quarter1883 full back1884 left guard1884 snap-back1887 snapper-back1887 running back1891 tackle1891 defensive end1897 guard1897 interferer1897 receiver1897 defensive back1898 defensive tackle1900 safety man1901 ball carrier1902 defensive lineman1902 homebrew1903 offensive lineman1905 lineman1907 returner1911 signal caller1915 rover1916 interference1920 punt returner1926 pass rusher1928 tailback1930 safety1931 blocker1935 faker1938 scatback1946 linesman1947 flanker1953 platoon player1953 corner-back1955 pulling guard1955 split end1955 return man1957 slot-back1959 strong safety1959 wide receiver1960 line-backer1961 pocket passer1963 tight end1963 run blocker1967 wideout1967 blitzer1968 1960    New Castle 		(Pa.)	 News 15 Oct. 12/5  				The Blues counter as assigning the defensive halfback on that side and the safety man to cover the two wide receivers. 1981    Washington Post 8 Apr.  d1  				We will have to take the best athlete available... That could be an offensive lineman, a running back or a wide receiver. 2011    Telegram & Gaz. 		(Mass.)	 		(Nexis)	 30 July (Sports section)  b1  				Tom Brady spent much of yesterday getting acquainted with the Patriots' newest wide receiver.   wide-ringed adj. designating wood, a tree, etc., having wide annual growth rings; cf. ring n.1 7d. ΚΠ 1892    F. Roth in  B. E. Fernow Timber Physics: Pt. I (U.S. Dept. Agric.: Forestry Div. Bull. No. 6) 42  				In one tree all pieces were made but 3 cm. thick radially, in another 4 cm., in still others 5 cm., while in some trees, especially wide-ringed oaks, the pieces were left still larger. 1905    Missouri Bot. Garden Ann. Rep. 119  				The pieces were chosen from specially wide-ringed trees. 1975    Philos. Trans. 		(Royal Soc.)	 B. 271 107  				In conifers,..wide-ringed wood tends to be less dense than narrow-ringed wood. 2013    P. S. Savill Silviculture of Trees Brit. Forestry 		(ed. 2)	 135  				A smooth finish can be obtained, even on wide-ringed timber.   wide-scale adj. occurring on a wide scale; extensive; cf. large-scale adj. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > 			[adjective]		 > extensive or on a large scale largea1400 ample1437 farc1475 diffused?1570 spacious1589 extensive1605 wholesale1642 diffuse1644 extense1644 voluminousa1652 amplivagant1656 extentive1658 numerousa1661 extended1700 amplivagous1731 far-reaching1824 Homeric1841 large-scale1856 wholescale1910 wide-scale1925 big-scale1930 macroscopic1931 broadscale1958 1925    Financial Times 15 Sept. 5/4  				He urges an immediate and wide-scale planting of upwards of a million acres. 1958    G. Lienhardt in  J. Middleton  & D. Tait Tribes without Rulers 108  				There was little wide-scale co-operation against the common enemies. 2011    Independent 1 July (Viewspaper section) 2/2  				A media empire which is responsible for widescale and illegal phone-hacking. ΘΚΠ the world > space > 			[adjective]		 > roomy > capacious capable1594 wide-side1606 captiousa1616 generous1615 capacious1656 spacious1819 continent1856 1606    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. 		(new ed.)	  ii. iv. 48  				Glory..Her wide-side Robes [Fr. ses robes trainantes]..All Story-wrought with bloody Victories.   wide-wale adj. (of a fabric, esp. corduroy) having widely-spaced ridges. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric manufactured in specific way > 			[adjective]		 > ribbed or corded > specific wide-wale1884 needlecord1973 1884    Clothier & Furnisher Oct. 11/1  				There is a pronounced disposition on the part of New Yorkers to select heavy weight wide wale diagonals instead. 1908    W. H. Baker Dict. Men's Wear 286  				Wide wale, worsted suitings with warp-wise or diagonal wales or flat ribs, often quite wide. 1980    L. Birnbach  et al.  Official Preppy Handbk. 98  				Wide wale corduroy pants. 2002    J. Eugenides Middlesex  iv. 404  				The crew neck sweaters..the Lacoste shirts, the wide-wale corduroys.   wide-winged adj. having wide wings (in various senses of wing n.); †(poetic) flying through a wide space or region (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > motion in the air > 			[adjective]		 > flying (as) with wings > through a wide region wide-winged1818 the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > 			[adjective]		 > hemimetabolous > belonging to Orthoptera > of or relating to locusts > having wide wings wide-winged1884 1637    W. Lithgow True Disc. Siege of Breda 3  				Thence carrocheering to Dunhag, that wide-winged Village, and Courtly Residence of the united States. 1773    J. Macpherson Diss. in  Poems of Ossian 		(new ed.)	 II. 65  				Foldath sent his shouts abroad, and kindled all the field: as a blast that lifts the wide-winged flame, over Lumon's ecchoing groves. 1818    P. B. Shelley Homer's Hymn to Moon 3  				Muses..Sing the wide-winged Moon! 1845    P. J. Bailey Festus 		(ed. 2)	 254  				The wide-winged wind. 1872    Ld. Tennyson Last Tournament in  Gareth & Lynette 116  				The wide-wing'd sunset of the misty marsh. 1884    J. G. Wood in  Sunday Mag. May 307/2  				Wide-winged as they are, the Locusts are very feeble in the air. 1985    C. Potok Davita's Harp 		(1993)	 v. 284  				I saw the white birds circling above the beach, wide-winged terns, wheeling, calling. 2015    Nation 		(Thailand)	 		(Nexis)	 28 Mar.  				The successful test of a wide-winged, solar-powered drone built to deliver wireless Internet service to remote spots.   wide work  n. Coal Mining (now historical and rare) a system of room and pillar mining (see room and pillar n. at room n.1 and int. Phrases 8) in which the passages are significantly wider than the pillars separating them; (also) mining done according to this system; frequently contrasted with narrow work n. at narrow adj. and n. Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1831    Manch. Times & Gaz. 2 Apr. 571/3  				Prices of a neighbouring coal master in the same mine... Wide work. 4s. 3d. per load... Strait Work... 3s. 6d. 1851    J. Hedley Pract. Treat. Coal Mines ii. 15  				Wide Work is a mode of working peculiar to the Yorkshire Coal Field. 1883    W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining  				Wide Work. A South Yorkshire system (now nearly obsolete) of working coal. 1993    C. Baylies Hist. Yorks. Miners 182  				The long-wall system involved the working of a long or wide face. In some cases it was distinguished by the term wide work as opposed to the narrow work of the pillar system. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † widev. Obsolete (rare in later use).   transitive. To make wide or wider; (also) to open wide or to the full extent; to widen. Also occasionally intransitive: to become wider.In quot. c1300: to lay (a table); cf. spread v. 11a.In quot. ?1440: to set widely apart. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > be far from			[verb (transitive)]		 > distance one thing from another wideOE the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > breadth or width > make broad or wide			[verb (transitive)]		 wideOE brede1440 widen1566 broaden1861 OE    Wærferð tr.  Gregory Dialogues 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 		(1900)	  iv. xxxvi. 315  				Þa seaðas, þæs þe þa secgað, þe hit witon, weaxað daga gehwilce & widiað. c1300						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Otho)	 		(1978)	 l. 11357  				Bumes ar blewe, bordes me wyde [c1275 Calig. bradden], water me brohte an flore mid goldene bole. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 8232  				Þan dide þe king tilward þat side þat orchiard al for to wide.   tr.  Palladius De re Rustica 		(Duke Humfrey)	 		(1896)	  iii. l. 923  				And wide hem so that, though the winde him shake, No drope of oon vntil another take. a1645    W. Browne First Song in  Wks. 		(1868)	 141  				Celadyne, now widing more the dore, Made a small noyse. 1655    Natura Exenterata 417  				Widen out of both sides of your seam as you did before at every four purles, til you have wided seven stitches at a side. 1680    J. Hinckley Fasciculus Literarum 138  				You are still widing the Breach, cutting out new Work, and putting up new Game. 1883    J. D. Hylton Heir of Lyolynn  iii. xxviii. 138  				Circle into circle springs, For ever widing in their round. 1892    D. H. van Histyne in  O. Zunz Making Amer. Corporate 		(1990)	 vi. 155  				How to inprove [sic] the machine to cut corn fodder to six or eight feet high with out widing the aprons. 1918    Automobile Jrnl. 10 Jan. 21/2  				One unusually attractive bag is a long and narrow shape, slightly widing out at the centre and ending in a point. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2017; most recently modified version published online December 2021). wideadv.α. Old English widor, late Middle English wijder, late Middle English–1600s wyder, 1500s– wider. β. Old English widdor, Middle English widder, Middle English wydder, Middle English wyddere, Middle English wyddore, Middle English wyddur.  1.   a.  Over or through a large space or region; so as to reach or affect many or various places or people; in a far-ranging manner.Frequently poetic except in far and wide at far adv. 2b, which is now the more usual term. Cf. wide and side at side adv.1 1. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > 			[adverb]		 > over or through a great distance roomOE widenOE wideOE farc1200 widely1579 OE    West Saxon Gospels: Matt. 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 xxiv. 7  				Manncwealmas beoð & hungras wide geond land. a1200    MS Trin. Cambr. in  R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies 		(1873)	 2nd Ser. 87  				He wandrede wide, wernende [read weruende] longe, sechende him oðer stede. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 l. 12807  				Þet lond he weste wide. c1325						 (c1300)						    Chron. Robert of Gloucester 		(Calig.)	 921  				We beþ men wide idriue aboute Fram contreie to contreie. a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1876)	 VI. 399  				He..sprad þe endes of his kyngdom wydder þan dede his fader. c1400						 (c1378)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Laud 581)	 		(1869)	 B.  xiv. l. 98  				I wiste neuere..Man þat with hym spake as wyde as I haue passed! c1400						 (?a1300)						    Kyng Alisaunder 		(Laud)	 		(1952)	 l. 7125  				His marshal Tholomeu, Þat many prince wyde kneu. ?a1475    in  J. Kail 26 Polit. Poems 		(1904)	 148  				In salt see I sayled well wyde. 1558    T. Phaer tr.  Virgil Seuen First Bks. Eneidos  iii. sig. G.ij  				In seas we wander wide. 1596    J. Dalrymple tr.  J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. 		(1888)	 I. 45  				Quhair ance it fixis the rute it spredis the selfe sa braid and wyde, that [etc.]. 1670    J. Milton Hist. Brit.  vi. 247  				Thence horsing thir Foot, diffus'd far wider thir outragious incursions. 1744    J. Thomson Winter in  Seasons 		(new ed.)	 225  				There..Wide-roams the Russian Exile. 1831    W. Wordsworth Yarrow Revisited 9  				Grave thoughts ruled wide on that sweet day. 1889    A. C. Swinburne Jacobite's Exile in  Poems & Ballads 3rd Ser. xiv  				On Keilder-side the wind blaws wide. 1930    G. W. Knight in  D. Lodge 20th Cent. Lit. Crit. 		(1972)	 169  				He welcomes disorder and confusion, would let them range wide over the earth. 1997    J. Noon Nymphomation 		(1998)	 83  				This fly is gonna travel wide! He's gonna send my message of gay love all over Manchester. 2012    T. Ojaide Drawing Map of Heaven ii. 25  				‘Travel wide,’ my father used to tell me. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > mining > 			[adverb]		 > method of mining opencast1859 wide1886 1886    Rep. Accidents Lithgow Valley Colliery in  Votes & Proc. Legislative Assembly New S. Wales 1885–6 V. 95  				Up towards the left-hand of the tunnel and near the mouth, were the places worked wide there? 1904    Times 23 May 7/6  				Payment was by tonnage raised when working ‘wide’—i.e., on the face of the seam.  2.   a.  With a large space or spaces between; at a wide interval or intervals; far from one another. Now frequently with apart. Cf. sense  3.In quot. 1481: with widely spaced or long steps. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > 			[adverb]		 > far apart wideOE the world > space > extension in space > spreading or diffusion > 			[adverb]		 > widely spread wideOE rivedlyc1300 widely1579 worldwide1836 worldwidely1856 statewide1888 nationwide1971 OE    Anglo-Saxon Chron. 		(Tiber. B.i)	 anno 1012  				Þa toferde se here wide swa he ær gegaderod wæs. a1250    Ureisun ure Louerde 		(Nero)	 in  R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies 		(1868)	 1st Ser. 201  				Hwi ne worpe ich me bi-tweonen þeo ilke ermes so swiðe wide to-spredde and i-openeð. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Gött.)	 l. 20385  				Ȝe þat sua wide sundred war spred, Sais me quat has ȝu hider led. c1425    J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. 		(Augustus A.iv)	  ii. l. 8036  				Þei departe þe fomy wawes wyde. 1481    W. Caxton tr.  Hist. Reynard Fox 		(1970)	 99  				The wulf strode wyder than reynard dyde and ofte ouertoke hym. 1684    Bp. G. Burnet tr.  T. More Utopia 68  				Where the Towns lie wider, they have much more Ground. 1727    A. Hamilton New Acct. E. Indies I. xii. 136  				The Churches being built wide from one another. 1794    G. Adams Lect. Nat. & Exper. Philos. III. xxviii. 182  				The greatest part of water-fowl, whose legs are set wide asunder for the convenience of swimming and turning quick in the water, have always a waddling motion upon land. 1859    C. Reade Good Fight i, in  Good Fight & Other Tales 7  				But when Gerard whispered ‘Sit wider!’ says she, ‘Ay! the table will soon be too big for the children.’ 1876    Atlantic Monthly Oct. 459/2  				They are as wide apart in time as possible. 1885    Manch. Examiner 22 June 5/3  				Their fields of activity are so wide apart. 1942    W. G. Hardy All Trumpets Sounded 133  				The single garment she wore, wrapped closely about her, moulded the pouting breasts, set wide apart. 1999    C. Dolan Ascension Day 		(2000)	 vi. 123  				He was simply small, with irregular features, a small nose maybe, or eyes too wide apart, or sticky-out ears. 2012    W. B. Cameron Dog's Journey 138  				People were sitting in chairs spaced wide apart.  b.  With reference to a horse's gait: with the hind or front legs relatively far apart. Chiefly with behind, before. Opposed to near adv.2 11. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > horse defined by speed or gait > 			[adverb]		 > with legs wide apart widea1450 a1450    Late Middle Eng. Treat. on Horses 		(1978)	 87 (MED)  				Loke þat he be hardi & coragious of herte, redi & lyȝt of his feet, & þat he go wyde in resoun. ?1528    J. Skelton Dyuers Balettys & Dyties viii  				She [sc. the mare] goyth wyde behynde & hewyth neuer a dele. 1607    G. Markham Cavelarice  iv. 39  				They will make him that he shall not stradle or go to wide behind. 1680    London Gaz. No. 1557/4  				A Bright Bay Gelding..Walks and Gallops wide behind. 1743    H. Bracken Traveller's Pocket-farrier 16  				It throws his Shoulder-blades farther asunder, and causes him to go wide before. 1777    Compl. Vermin-killer 59  				If he..goes wide behind, and near before,..he is very likely to prove a good servant. 1834    Veterinarian May 287  				The horse rapidly became weaker;..stood wide behind, the better to support himself. 1895    J. Dimon Amer. Horses & Horse Breeding x. 96  				He has free, abundant action;..he has not the usual fault of the Hambletonians of going too wide behind. 1911    C. T. Davies Horse i. 26  				Some very fast horses go wide behind, but the peculiarity is unsightly. 2006    P. Schofler Flight without Wings viii. 100  				She will also evaluate how the horse uses his hindquarters. Does he step wide behind? Or does he step under?  c.  So as to be loose or free from being tied or held together. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > 			[adverb]		 > apart or asunder > loosely asunder wide1785 1785    W. Cowper Task  i. 567  				The sportive wind blows wide Their flutt'ring rags, and shows a tawny skin. a1822    P. B. Shelley Cyclops in  Posthumous Poems 		(1824)	 331  				Shaking wide thy yellow hair. 1832    Ld. Tennyson Lady of Shalott  iii, in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 15  				Out flew the web, and floated wide. 1920    R. Carpenter Plainsman & Other Poems 89  				Maenad, shake wide your hair! 1946    L. O'Flaherty Land xix. 121  				She stretched out her arms and legs, shook wide her hair and floated with her face to the sun. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > 			[adverb]		 wideOE awaya1375 upon farc1380 offc1400 aferroma1425 at length?1611 in distans1645 OE    Antwerp-London Gloss. 		(2011)	 112  				Relegatus, wide asend. c1275						 (?c1250)						    Owl & Nightingale 		(Calig.)	 		(1935)	 288  				Ne lust me wit þe screwen chide, For þi ich wende from hom wide. a1350    in  R. H. Robbins Hist. Poems 14th & 15th Cent. 		(1959)	 99  				So wyde I walkede þat I wax wery of þe wey. a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1869)	 II. 5  				White rokkes aboute þe clyues of þe see þat were i-seie wide [L. a longe apparentibus]. a1413						 (c1385)						    G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde 		(Pierpont Morgan)	 		(1881)	  i. l. 629  				I haue my-self ek seyn a blynd man go Ther as he fel þat coude loke wyde. a1475						 (?a1350)						    Seege Troye 		(Harl.)	 		(1927)	 l. 1165 (MED)  				Þe kyng full wyde Gadered more folke, be eueri syde. ?1572    R. Sempill Premonitioun Barnis of Leith 		(single sheet)	  				Wandering wyde fra this countrie Amang all vther Natiounis. 1590    E. Spenser Faerie Queene  i. i. sig. A7v  				A litle wyde There was an holy chappell edifyde. 1623    J. Taylor New Discouery by Sea sig. B  				A Towne call'd Goreing, stood neare two miles wide. 1690    W. Temple Ess. Gardens of Epicurus 57 in  Miscellanea: 2nd Pt.  				The Chineses: a People, whose way of thinking, seems to lie as wide of ours in Europe as their Country does. 1693    R. Plott in  Miscellanies Curious Subj. 		(1714)	 44  				His Ships..lying above a Mile and half wide off the Town of Sandwich. 1715    tr.  H. Michelot Mediterranean Pilot 67  				The Fornigues of Talamon are Three flat Rocks lying..Ten or Twelve Miles wide of the Coast of Talamon. 1756    G. Washington Let. 2 Dec. in  Writings 		(1889)	 I. 391  				Fort Cumberland, lying more advanced, and wide of all other forts. 1857    N. Hawthorne Jrnl. 1 Mar. in  Eng. Notebks. 		(1997)	 II.  v. 180  				Not only in this district, but wide away. 1859    G. Meredith Last Words Juggling Jerry in  Once a Week 3 Sept. 189/2  				I was a lad not wide from here. 1876    W. Morris tr.  Virgil Æneids  xi. 318  				Bristled boars, and sheep they snatch from meadows wide away.  4.  With a wide or broad opening; so as to be fully open; to the full extent. Frequently used with verbs such as open, fling, or fly, with reference to opening a door, gate, etc. Cf. wide open adj. 1, and the predicative use of wide adj. 7a. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > 			[adverb]		 > widely wideOE rifea1400 widely1838 OE    Paris Psalter 		(1932)	 cxviii. 131  				Muð ic ontynde minne wide, þæt me min oroð ut afæmde. a1275    St. Margaret 		(Trin. Cambr.)	 l. 171 in  A. S. M. Clark Seint Maregrete & Body & Soul 		(Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Michigan)	 		(1972)	 59  				Ho sei a foul dragun ine þe hurne glide, berninde ase fur ant goninde ful wide. a1300						 (c1275)						    Physiologus 		(1991)	 342  				Ðanne him hungreð, he gapeð wide. c1330    Otuel 		(Auch.)	 		(1882)	 l. 1659 (MED)  				He dude op þe ȝate wide, & lette ham boþe out ride. c1380    Sir Ferumbras 		(1879)	 l. 4651  				Þan was þar a geant ful of pryde, And openede þe water-gate wyde, Ys name was enfachoun. a1400    Siege Jerusalem 		(Laud)	 		(1932)	 l. 390  				A dragoun..Wyde gapande..gomes to swelwe. c1460						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Laud)	 l. 18125  				Opyn your yates ye prynces wyde. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Psalms lxxx[i]. 10  				Open thy mouth wyde, & I shal fyll it. 1558    T. Phaer tr.  Virgil Seuen First Bks. Eneidos  vi. sig. Q.iijv  				He [sc. Cerberus] gaping wyde his threfold iawes. a1616    W. Shakespeare King John 		(1623)	  ii. i. 450  				The mouth of passage shall we fling wide ope, And giue you entrance. 1635    J. Swan Speculum Mundi viii. §1. 386  				When the Pearl-fish gapeth wide, she hath a curious glistering within her shell. 1714    J. Gay Shepherd's Week  ii. 37  				Thy neckcloth..o'er thy Kersey Doublet spreading wide. 1780    W. Cowper Progress of Error 282  				The breach, though small at first, soon opening wide, In rushes folly with a full-moon tide. 1824    Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto XVI cxvii. 122  				The door flew wide. 1889    H. R. Haggard Cleopatra  ii. xii. 200  				The doors were flung wide. 1905    Tales Sept. 13/2  				She flung wide her arms and cried ‘Come to me!’. 1969    A. Carter Heroes & Villains 		(1981)	 v. 93  				He opened his eyes wide as if surprised at her naïvety. 2012    S. Reifenberg Santiago's Children xvi. 100  				In the car on the way to the dentist's office, I said, ‘Open wide’, and Andrés looked at me with his mouth gaping open.  5.  So as to deviate from what is correct, desired, or intended; far from something in nature, character, outlook, etc.; so as to diverge from something. In early use also: †so as to err in opinion or belief, mistakenly (obsolete). Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lack of truth, falsity > 			[adverb]		 > in a wrong way, amiss on missc1225 overthwarta1382 a-crookc1500 awrya1513 wide?1529 astray1535 across1559 bias1600 outa1641 beside the bridge1652 on the wrong side of the post1728 abroad1806 off1843 way off1882 off beam1941 up the boohai?1946 ?1529    R. Hyrde tr.  J. L. Vives Instr. Christen Woman  i. xvi. sig. Sv  				Brynge them to fylthynes and foly, whan they wolde fayne please the women, and se they can nat, excepte they go wyde from all conditions perteynynge vnto men. a1535    T. More Dialoge of Comfort 		(1553)	  i. x. sig. B.viiiv  				Naye Cosin..there walke you somewhat wyde: for there you defende your owne ryghte for youre temporall auayle. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Prol.  				Many wryters..seldome made mencyon of ye scripture of the Byble: & though they some tyme aleged it, yet was it done..so wyde from ye purpose, that a man maye well perceaue, how that they neuer sawe the oryginall. 1586    A. Day Eng. Secretorie  i. sig. L1v  				You recken to wide,..you are to much deceiued. 1610    P. Holland tr.  W. Camden Brit.  i. 486  				If I should fetch it from Gron a Saxon word that signifieth a fenny place, I might perhaps goe wide. 1677    T. Otway Titus & Berenice  i. ii. sig. B3v  				Thou answerst wide of my desire. 1705    tr.  W. Bosman New Descr. Coast of Guinea xiv. 242  				This carries me wide from my Subject. 1710    R. Steele Tatler No. 234. ⁋4  				To compare our Practice with their Precepts, and find where it was that we came short, or went wide. 1821    Rep. Proc. & Deb. of Convent. State N.Y. 84/2  				If..we only correct what is amiss, we cannot go wide astray. 1839    Pict. Bible III. 594/1  				There is no need to go wide from the English translation ‘fir tree’. 1882    Lippincott's Mag. Apr. 413/1  				I address many questions..which are not answered, or are answered wide of my meaning. 1951    Bull. Mass. Audubon Soc. Jan. 40  				The Jays..went far wide of their customary menus and stuffed so greedily each time that they must now be searching for soda-bicarb. 1972    Outlook 		(Karachi)	 24 June 6/1  				Something happened and things went wide of what obviously had been intended.  6.  So as to miss to one side of a point aimed at (by a large distance); at a (large) distance to one side of an intended or correct target; so as to go around or pass by the side of something. Also in figurative contexts. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > 			[adverb]		 > aside from proper course asidea1398 far-about1483 wide1536 a-skie1554 tangentially1903 tangently1903 1536    R. Morison Remedy for Sedition sig. B.ii  				The bowe shooteth wyde, yf ye holde it not streyghte. 1545    R. Ascham Toxophilus  i. f. 48v  				Than..those be wiser men, which couete to shote wyde than those whiche couete to hit the prycke. 1590    E. Spenser Faerie Queene  i. xi. sig. K7v  				Then badd the knight this Lady..To an hill her selfe withdraw asyde,..She him obayd, and turnd a litle wyde. 1603    W. Shakespeare Hamlet  ii. ii. 475  				Pyrrus at Pryam driues, but all in rage, Strikes wide. a1625    F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Captaine  ii. ii, in  Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 sig. Gg3v/2  				You hurt not me Your anger flies so wide. 1639    T. Fuller Hist. Holy Warre  i. xvii. 27  				In bowling they must needs throw wide, which know not the green or alley whereon they play. 1687    A. Lovell tr.  J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant  i. 97  				A little wide of the way to the Right Hand, I saw the Church. 1731    D. Waterland Script. Vindicated  ii. 159  				He had quite mistaken his Road... He blindly wandered and went wide. 1799    E. Dubois Piece Family Biogr. II. 3  				The doctor..had escaped by going a little wide of the ass. 1826    J. M. Sherer Notes & Refl. Ramble Germany 160  				Their guide took them to the height on the left..; I therefore passed wide of them, to the right. 1833    J. Nyren Young Cricketer's Tutor 24  				A..ball..pitched a little wide of the off stump. 1899    H. R. Haggard Swallow xviii. 172  				Zinti fired at him, but the ball went wide. 1913    Amer. Mag. Jan. 54/3  				Too much of our reforming energy has been spent upon a symptom, and..our blows have fallen far wide of the real disorder. 1958    C. N. Parkinson Parkinson's Law 		(1961)	 108  				Water from the broken skylight drips wide of the bucket placed to catch it. 1987    Grimsby Evening Tel. 8 Dec. 17  				His firsttime effort went wide, then Broughton had a goalbound shot blocked. 2015    Guardian 		(Nexis)	 10 Jan. (Sports section)  				He glances it [sc. the ball] just wide of Warner at leg slip.  7.  In various team sports (esp. Association Football): at or near the sides of the pitch or field. ΚΠ 1906    Washington Post 2 Nov. 8/4  				Magoffin was playing wide..when Garrels passed the ball to him. 1929    Manch. Guardian 6 Aug. 13/  				The wing halves played wide out near the touch-line. 1976    M. J. Arlen View from Highway 1 93  				Snelling goes wide. Simmons rolls to the right and fires. 2012    J. Maxymuk NFL Head Coaches 3/2  				A team ran wide and got tackled near the sideline. Compounds a.   Forming adjectives with present participles, past participles, and (less commonly) adjectives. ΚΠ 1565    in  J. Bell Queen Elizabeth & Swedish Princess 		(1926)	 35  				Your wyde stretched fame. 1570    B. Googe tr.  T. Kirchmeyer Popish Kingdome  iii. f. 29v  				With the wide resounding mouth, it doth no whit agree. 1605    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks.  ii. ii. 489  				Wide-yawning Gulphs. 1606    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. 		(new ed.)	  ii. iii. 142  				As..the Grasse..Falls at the foot of the wide-stradling Mower. 1665    R. Alleine Heaven Opened xvii. 314  				Shall the stars dwell with the dust? Or the wide distant Poles be brought to mutual embraces and cohabitation? 1718    A. Pope tr.  Homer Iliad IV.  xv. 813  				The Scene wide-opening to the Blaze of Light. 1726    J. Thomson Winter 		(ed. 2)	 52  				The wide-resounding Plain. 1730    J. Thomson Summer in  Seasons 104  				Wide-rent, the clouds Pour a whole flood. 1742    E. Young Complaint: Night the Third 17  				Smoak betrays the wide-consuming Fire. 1744    J. Thomson Spring in  Seasons 		(new ed.)	 5  				Such Themes as these the rural Maro sung To wide-imperial Rome. 1750    W. Shenstone Rural Elegance 124  				Fame's wide-echoing trumpet. 1816    P. B. Shelley There is no Work 28  				The wide-winding caves. 1849    A. A. Paton Highlands & Islands of Adriatic II. xix. 253  				The wide-scattered city, with its zone of the glacis, is the foreground of the view. 1865    E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind ix. 258  				The common notion..has strong and wide-lying evidence in its favour. 1887    C. A. Moloney Sketch Forestry W. Afr. 301  				A wide-climbing shrub. 1914    D. Barnes in  A. Berry New York 		(1989)	 151  				The wide-spanning arches of red light, is an appeal. 1975    Pop. Mech. Dec. 62/3  				A wide-opening shutter whose effective speed is about 1/30 second. 2014    J. Swafford Beethoven xxxii. 892  				The wide-arching melodies of the late slow movements.  b.     wide-apart adj. ΚΠ 1902    S. Crane Last Words 234  				He never came out of this manner save in wide-apart cases. 1941    E. Bowen Look at all those Roses 39  				The wide-apart birch-trees. 1983    T. Hughes in  Listener 21 Apr. 27/1  				They have a chirruppy, chicken-sweet expression With goo-goo starlet wide-apart eyes. 2005    Spectator 26 Mar. 61/1  				She just shoots them this lingering look from those big wide-apart eyes of hers.   wide-branching adj. ΚΠ 1708    J. Philips Cyder  i. 481  				Her wide-branching Arms. 1873    W. D. Howells Chance Acquaintance ii. 39  				An audacious, wide-branching mustache. 1927    D. N. Shoemaker Jerusalem Artichoke as Crop Plant (U.S. Dept. Agric. Techn. Bull. No. 33) 17  				Its strong-growing, wide-branching habit and its large heavy leaves. 2014    Duke Chron. 		(Nexis)	 13 Nov. 1  				The wide-branching web of technology, which connects one corner of the world with another.   wide-circling adj. ΚΠ 1695    W. Congreve Pindarique Ode on Namure 3  				Thro' Seas, Earth, Air, and the wide circling Sky. 1872    J. S. Blackie Lays of Highlands 164  				There's room in God's wide-circling arm For all that swear by all the creeds. 2015    Hobart 		(Austral.)	 Mercury 		(Nexis)	 28 May 6  				This home is a bastion of privacy, with glorious, wide circling views from almost every room over three levels.   wide-expanded adj. ΚΠ 1649    R. Baxter Saints Everlasting Rest 		(new ed.)	  iv. xi. 765  				Look up to the glorious Sun; view the wide expanded encompassing heavens. 1867    R. I. Murchison Siluria 		(new ed.)	 x. 238  				A wide expanded precaudal joint. 2004    V. Crapanzano Imaginative Horizons vii. 207  				A little child..whose eyes were wide-expanded as the full-blown lotus-flower.   wide-expanding adj. ΚΠ 1695    T. D'Urfey Gloriana vii. 12  				Four Cherubs..thro' the wide expanding Air, to their Third Heaven flew. 1741    W. Wilkes Ess. Pleasures & Advantages Female Lit. 66  				This new erected, venerable Frame, Smiles on a Chrystal, wide-expanding Stream. 1860    E. B. Pusey Minor Prophets 321  				A wide-expanding knowledge of the enlargement of mankind. 2005    P. Nabarz tr.  in  Myst. Mithras App. A 177  				Mithra.., Who takes possession of the beautiful, wide-expanding law.   wide-extended adj. ΚΠ a1644    F. Quarles Shepheards Oracles 		(1646)	 vi. 65  				Their vast and wide extended wombs abound With precious oyle. 1708    J. Philips Cyder  ii. 588  				His wide-extended Wings. 1765    Museum Rusticum 4 375  				With numerous, wide-extended branches. 1856    London Q. Rev. Oct. 237/2  				There are innumerable churches from the domes of which a wide-extended view may be commanded of the city and the country around. 1925    W. P. Reeves Passing of Forest 40  				With wide-extended steadfast wings. 2013    Jrnl. Invertebr. Pathol. 113 42  				In honey bee colonies the disappearance of foragers is a common factor of the wide extended colony losses.   wide-extending adj. ΚΠ 1606    E. Forset Compar. Disc. Bodies Nat. & Politique To Reader sig. ¶ iij  				That wide extending vniuersall. 1889    F. Cowper Capt. of Wight 34  				The wide-extending view, over broad pasture and swelling down. 2013    tr.  H.-J. Zillmer Energy Mistake vi. 234  				This study has documented the stability of methane over a wide extending pressure-temperature range.   wide-flung adj. ΚΠ 1826    Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Nov. 677/2  				Deep though the umbrage be, and wide-flung the arms of the oaks. 1863    H. W. Longfellow Musician's Tale  v. ii, in  Tales Wayside Inn 88  				The wide-flung door. 2014    Florida Times-Union 		(Nexis)	 5 July  b1  				The travails and triumphs of a wide-flung group of..people.   wide-gaping adj. ΚΠ 1602    R. Carew Surv. Cornwall  ii. 149  				The riuer Fala, falling here, into the seas wide-gaping mouth, hath endowed it [sc. Falmouth] with that name. a1721    J. Sheffield Wks. 		(1753)	 I. 71  				The wide-gaping gulph. 1824    T. Horsfield Zool. Res. Java at Calyptomena viridis  				The posterior union of both mandibles, by which the wide-gaping mouth is formed. 2013    K. Wrenhaven in  B. Akrigg  & R. Tordoff Slaves & Slavery in Anc. Greek Comic Drama vi. 138  				The grotesque mask, complete with..a wide-gaping mouth.   wide-opened adj. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > 			[adjective]		 > wide open or gaping yawningc893 wideOE wide open?c1225 gap-wide1582 gaping1594 mouthed1609 patulous1616 wide-opened1635 dehiscent1649 discontinuous1667 patulent1712 hiant1800 yawn-mouthed1861 1635    N. Campbell Treat. upon Death sig. C2  				That wide opened sepulchre. 1864    W. W. Skeat tr.  J. L. Uhland Songs & Ballads 269  				From Heav'n's wide-opened portals. 1917    ‘Windlass’ With the R.N.R. ii. 29  				Starkey, whose wide-opened mouth..betokened a total and sonorous disinterest in the proceedings. 2015    Hutchinson 		(Kansas)	 News 		(Nexis)	 11 June  				Birds and animals with wide-opened eyes.   wide-ranging adj. ΚΠ 1707    E. Settle Carmen Irenicum 15  				When thy wide ranging Wings such Glory trace. 1816    Edinb. Rev. Sept. 182  				This wide-ranging Intellect was illuminated by the brightest Fancy. 1958    Times Lit. Suppl. 7 Feb. 76/4  				A representative anthology, which is so wide-ranging in its material..that its final effect is rather of confusion than of enlightenment. 1980    B. Hill in  Beautiful Brit. Columbia Summer 39  				The wide-ranging sheep that are one of the island's main farm products provide the source of wool for local weavers. 2012    Independent 11 Dec. 1/5  				Plans to give police and security services wide-ranging powers to snoop on emails and website visits.   wide-reaching adj. ΚΠ 1629    A. Top Psalm CIV in  Bk. Prayses 102  				The great and wide reaching Sea. 1758    Enq. into Plan & Pretensions Mr. Sheridan 18  				Under pretence of leading us to some fair wide-reaching Prospect, he tempts us to follow him. 1856    G. Grote Hist. Greece XII.  ii. xciv. 346  				The..powerful, and wide-reaching impression. 1911    J. B. Bury et al.  Cambr. Medieval Hist. 551  				One of the measures of this Emperor was the assumption of a wide-reaching guardianship. 2001    Times 5 Dec.  i. 19/4  				Although the group operated far outside the mainstream its impact was wide-reaching.   wide-rolling adj. ΚΠ 1718    A. Pope tr.  Homer Iliad IV.  xiii. 1005  				The Waves behind impel the Waves before, Wide-rolling foaming high, and tumbling to the shore. 1785    T. Dwight Conquest of Canäan  xi. 295  				Wide-rolling dust the neighbouring concave fills. 1805    J. Montgomery Ocean i  				Thou wide-rolling Ocean, all hail! 2008    P. Weintraub Cure Unknown 		(2009)	 i. 26  				The wide-rolling lawns of the Long Island town Dix Hills.   wide-spaced adj. ΚΠ 1850    J. H. Parker Gloss. Terms Grecian, Rom., Ital. & Gothic Archit. 		(new ed.)	 I. 34  				Araeostyle..i.e. with wide-spaced columns. 1991    Bicycling Feb. 120/2  				Any wide-spaced 6-speed freehub can be converted to narrow 7 spacing. 2015    Sc. Daily Mail 		(Nexis)	 3 Sept. 53  				Those wide-spaced, intelligent eyes have been more than a match for the ravages of time.   wide-stretched adj. ΚΠ 1565    in  J. Bell Queen Elizabeth & Swedish Princess 		(1926)	 35  				Your wyde stretched fame. 1600    W. Shakespeare Henry V  ii. iv. 82  				All wide stretched titles that belongs..Vnto the Crowne of France. 1744    E. Young Complaint: Night the Seventh 37  				The wide-stretcht Realm of Intellectual Woe. 1924    J. W. Raine Land of Saddle-bags 		(1977)	 vii. 167  				A dozen academies in these wide-stretched settlements could educate but a few. 2014    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 6 Feb. 		(Late ed.)	  c5  				Dancers poised in wide-stretched leg positions.   wide-stretching adj. ΚΠ 1660    A. Brett Restauration 21  				That wide stretching Conscience Which can with Royal blood dispence. 1744    J. Thomson Winter in  Seasons 		(new ed.)	 232  				Wide-stretching from these Shores... A huge neglected Empire. 1876    ‘G. Eliot’ Daniel Deronda IV.  viii. lxix. 353  				Wide-stretching purposes. 1920    Mariner's Mirror 6 348/1  				Wide stretching mud prevents landing at low tide except at a few, generally artificial, causeways. 2014    Washington Post 		(Nexis)	 2 Feb.  t1  				There is a melancholic cloud that hangs over the film's wide-stretching landscapes.   wide-sweeping adj. ΚΠ 1815    Hull Packet 3 Oct.  				The deceased..was by this wide-sweeping calamity suddenly and unexpectedly plunged in a state of bankruptcy. 1924    Motor 14 Oct. 491 		(caption)	  				One of the two wide-sweeping bankings on the new speedway at Montlhery, near Paris. 1979    Jrnl. Royal Soc. Arts 127 409/2  				Wessex..will therefore not be subjected to wide-sweeping environmental problems. 2015    Belfast Tel. 		(Nexis)	 13 July 22  				The only way out is to restructure the country's debt, or cancel it altogether and start with fresh capital and wide-sweeping reforms. ΚΠ 1674    J. Milton Paradise Lost 		(ed. 2)	  xi. 487  				Wide-wasting Pestilence. 1814    W. Wordsworth When Soft Hand of Sleep 145  				Wide-wasting Time. 1887    J. Ruskin Let. 23 July in  Wks. 		(1909)	 XXXVII. 592  				I have never yet been so hopeless of doing anything more in this wide-wasting and wasted earth unless we seize and fortify with love—a new Atlantis. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022). <  | 
	
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