verb (used without object),melt·ed,melt·ed or mol·ten,melt·ing.
to become liquefied by warmth or heat, as ice, snow, butter, or metal.
to become liquid; dissolve: Let the cough drop melt in your mouth.
to pass, dwindle, or fade gradually (often followed by away): His fortune slowly melted away.
to pass, change, or blend gradually (often followed by into): Night melted into day.
to become softened in feeling by pity, sympathy, love, or the like: The tyrant's heart would not melt.
Obsolete. to be subdued or overwhelmed by sorrow, dismay, etc.
verb (used with object),melt·ed,melt·ed or mol·ten,melt·ing.
to reduce to a liquid state by warmth or heat; fuse: Fire melts ice.
to cause to pass away or fade.
to cause to pass, change, or blend gradually.
to soften in feeling, as a person or the heart.
noun
the act or process of melting; state of being melted.
something that is melted.
a quantity melted at one time.
a sandwich or other dish topped with melted cheese: a tuna melt.
Origin of melt
1
First recorded before 900; Middle English melten,Old English meltan (intransitive), m(i)elten (transitive) “to melt, digest”; cognate with Old Norse melta “to digest,” Greek méldein “to melt”
SYNONYMS FOR melt
4 dwindle.
10 gentle, mollify, relax.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR melt ON THESAURUS.COM
synonym study for melt
1. Melt,dissolve,fuse,thaw imply reducing a solid substance to a liquid state. To melt is to bring a solid to a liquid condition by the agency of heat: to melt butter.Dissolve, though sometimes used interchangeably with melt, applies to a different process, depending upon the fact that certain solids, placed in certain liquids, distribute their particles throughout the liquids: A greater number of solids can be dissolved in water and in alcohol than in any other liquids.To fuse is to subject a solid (usually a metal) to a very high temperature; it applies especially to melting or blending metals together: Bell metal is made by fusing copper and tin.To thaw is to restore a frozen substance to its normal (liquid, semiliquid, or more soft and pliable) state by raising its temperature above the freezing point: Sunshine will thaw ice in a lake.