World Definition–noun | 1. | the earth or globe, considered as a planet. |
| 2. | (often initial capital letter ) a particular division of the earth: the Western world. |
| 3. | the earth or a part of it,
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with its inhabitants, affairs, etc., during a particular period: the ancient world. |
| 4. | humankind; the human race; humanity: The world must eliminate war and poverty. |
| 5. | the public generally: The whole world knows it. |
| 6. | the class of persons devoted to the affairs, interests, or pursuits of this life: The world worships success. |
| 7. | a particular class
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of people, with common interests, aims, etc.: the fashionable world. |
| 8. | any sphere, realm, or domain, with all pertaining to it: a child's world; the world of dreams; the insect world. |
| 9. | everything that exists; the universe; the macrocosm. |
| 10. | any complex whole conceived as resembling the universe: the world of the microcosm. |
| 11. | one of the three general groupings of physical nature: animal world; mineral world; vegetable world. |
| 12. | any period, state, or sphere of existence: this world; the world to come. |
| 13. | Often, worlds. a great deal: That vacation was worlds of fun. |
| 14. | any indefinitely great expanse. |
| 15. | any heavenly body: the starry worlds. |
—Idioms| 16. | bring into the world, | a. | to give birth to; bear: My grandmother brought nine children into the world. |
| b. | to deliver (a baby): the doctor brought many children into the world. |
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| 17. | come into the world, to be born: Her first child came into the world in June. |
| 18. | for all the world, | a. | for any consideration, however great: She wouldn't come to visit us for all the world. |
| b. | in every respect; precisely: You look for all the world like my Aunt Mary. |
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| 19. | in the world, | a. | at all; ever: I never in the world would have believed such an obvious lie. |
| b. | from among all possibilities: Where in the world did you find that hat? |
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| 20. | on top of the world. top1 (def. 46). |
| 21. | out of this or the world, exceptional; fine: The chef prepared a roast duck that was out of this world. |
| 22. | set the world on fire, to achieve great fame and success: He didn't seem to be the type to set the world on fire. |
| 23. | think the world of, to like or admire greatly: His coworkers think the world of him. |
| 24. | world without end, for all eternity; for always. |
| From Dictionary
Time Definition–noun | 1. | the system of those sequential relations that any event has to any other, as past, present, or future; indefinite and continuous duration regarded as that in which events succeed one another. |
| 2. | duration regarded as belonging to the present life as distinct from the life to come or from eternity; finite duration. |
| 3. | (sometimes initial capital letter ) a system or method of measuring or reckoning the passage of time: mean time; apparent time; Greenwich Time. |
| 4. | a limited period or interval, as between two successive events: a long time. |
| 5. | a particular period considered as distinct from other periods: Youth is the best time of life. |
| 6. | Often, times. | a. | a period in the history of the world, or contemporary with the life or activities of a notable person: prehistoric times; in Lincoln's time. |
| b. | the period or era now or previously present: a sign of the times; How times have changed! |
| c. | a period considered with reference to its events or prevailing conditions, tendencies, ideas, etc.: hard times; a time of war. |
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| 7. | a prescribed or allotted period, as of one's life, for payment of a debt, etc. |
| 8. | the end of a prescribed or allotted period, as of one's life or a pregnancy: His time had come, but there was no one left to mourn over him. When her time came, her husband accompanied her to the delivery room. |
| 9. | a period with reference to personal experience of a specified kind: to have a good time; a hot time in the old town tonight. |
| 10. | a period of work of an employee, or the pay for it; working hours or days or an hourly or daily pay rate. |
| 11. | Informal. a term of enforced duty or imprisonment: to serve time in the army; do time in prison. |
| 12. | the period necessary for or occupied by something: The time of the baseball game was two hours and two minutes. The bus takes too much time, so I'll take a plane. |
| 13. | leisure time; sufficient or spare time: to have time for a vacation; I have no time to stop now. |
| 14. | a particular or definite point in time, as indicated by a clock: What time is it? |
| 15. | a particular part of a year, day, etc.; season or period: It's time for lunch. |
| 16. | an appointed, fit, due, or proper instant or period: a time for sowing; the time when the sun crosses the meridian; There is a time for everything. |
| 17. | the particular point in time when an event is scheduled to take place: train time; curtain time. |
| 18. | an indefinite, frequently prolonged period or duration in the future: Time will tell if what we have done here today was right. |
| 19. | the right occasion or opportunity: to watch one's time. |
| 20. | each occasion of a recurring action or event: to do a thing five times; It's the pitcher's time at bat. |
| 21. | times, used as a multiplicative word in phrasal combinations expressing how many instances of a quantity or factor are taken together: Two goes into six three times; five times faster. |
| 22. | Drama. one of the three unities. Compare unity <
52d
span class="dn">(def. 8). |
| 23. | Prosody. a unit or a group of units in the measurement of meter. |
| 24. | Music. | a. | tempo; relative rapidity of movement. |
| b. | the metrical duration of a note or rest. |
| c. | proper or characteristic tempo. |
| d. | the general movement of a particular kind of musical composition with reference to its rhythm, metrical structure, and tempo. |
| e. | the movement of a dance or the like to music so arranged: waltz time. |
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| 25. | Military. rate of marching, calculated on the number of paces taken per minute: double time; quick time. |
| 26. | Manège. each completed action or movement of the horse. |
–adjective | 27. | of, pertaining to, or showing the passage of time. |
| 28. | (of an explosive device) containing a clock so that it will detonate at the desired moment: a time bomb. |
| 29. | Commerce. payable at a stated period of time after presentment: time drafts or notes. |
| 30. | of or pertaining to purchases on the installment plan, or with payment postponed. |
–verb (used with object) | 31. | to measure or record the speed, duration, or rate of: to time a race. |
| 32. | to fix the duration of: The proctor timed the test at 15 minutes. |
| 33. | to fix the interval between (actions, events, etc.): They timed their strokes at six per minute. |
| 34. | to regulate (a train, clock, etc.) as to time. |
| 35. | to appoint or choose the moment or occasion for; schedule: He timed the attack perfectly. |
–verb (used without object) | 36. | to keep time; sound or move in unison. |
—Idioms| 37. | against time, in an effort to finish something within a limited period: We worked against time to get out the newspaper. |
| 38. | ahead of time, before the time due; early: The building was completed ahead of time. |
| 39. | at one time, | a. | once; in a for
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mer time: At one time they owned a restaurant. |
| b. | at the same time; at once: They all tried to talk at one time. |
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| 40. | at the same time, nevertheless; yet: I'd like to try it, but at the same time I'm a little afraid. |
| 41. | at times, at intervals; occasionally: At times the city becomes intolerable. |
| 42. | beat someone's time, Slang. to compete for or win a person being dated or courted by another; prevail over a rival: He accused me, his own brother, of trying to beat his time. |
| 43. | behind the times, old-fashioned; dated: These attitudes are behind the times. |
| 44. | for the time being, temporarily; for the present: Let's forget about it for the time being. |
| 45. | from time to time, on occasion; occasionally; at intervals: She comes to see us from time to time. |
| 46. | gain time, to postpone in order to make preparations or gain an advantage; delay the outcome of: He hoped to gain time by putting off signing the papers for a few days more. |
| 47. | in good time, | a. | at the right time; on time; punctually. |
| b. | in advance of the right time; early: We arrived at the appointed spot in good time. |
|
| 48. | in no time, in a very brief time; almost at once: Working together, they cleaned the entire house in no time. |
| 49. | in time, | a. | early enough: to come in time for dinner. |
| b. | in the future; eventually: In time he'll see what is right. |
| c. | in the correct rhythm or tempo: There would always be at least one child who couldn't play in time with the music. |
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| 50. | keep time, | a. | to record time, as a watch or clock does. |
| b. | to mark or observe the tempo. |
| c. | to perform rhythmic movements in unison. |
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| 51. | kill time, to occupy oneself with some activity to make time pass quickly: While I was waiting, I killed time counting the cars on the freight trains. |
| 52. | make time, | a. | to move quickly, esp. in an attempt to recover lost time. |
| b. | to travel at a particular speed. |
|
| 53. | make time with, Slang. to pursue or take as a sexual partner. |
| 54. | many a time, again and again; frequently: Many a time they didn't have enough to eat and went to bed hungry. |
| 55. | mark time, | a. | to suspend progress temporarily, as to await developments; fail to advance. |
| b. | Military. to move the feet alternately as in marching, but without advancing. |
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| 56. | on one's own time, during one's free time; without payment: He worked out more efficient production methods on his own time. |
| 57. | on time, | a. | at the specified time; punctually. |
| b. | to be paid for within a designated period of time, as in installments: Many people are never out of debt because they buy everything on time. |
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| 58. | out of time, not in the proper rhythm: His singing was out of time with the music. |
| 59. | pass the time of day, to converse briefly with or greet someone: The women would stop in the market to pass the time of day. |
| 60. | take one's time, to be slow or leisurely; dawdle: Speed was important here, but he just took his time. |
| 61. | time after time, again and again; repeatedly;
bae
often: I've told him time after time not to slam the door. |
| 62. | time and time again, repeatedly; often: Time and time again I warned her to stop smoking. Also, time and again. |
| 63. | time of life, (one's) age: At your time of life you must be careful not to overdo things. |
| 64. | time of one's life, Informal. an extremely enjoyable experience: They had the time of their lives on their trip to Europe. |
| From Dictionary
Clock Definition–noun | 1. | an instrument for measuring and recording time, esp. by mechanical means, usually with hands or changing numbers to indicate the hour and minute: not designed to be worn or carried about. |
| 3. | a
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meter or other device, as a speedometer or taximeter, for measuring and recording speed, distance covered, or other quantitative functioning. |
| 5. | (initial capital letter ) Astronomy. the constellation Horologium. |
| 6. | Computers. the circuit in a digital computer that provides a common reference train of electronic pulses for all other circuits. |
–verb (used with object) | 7. | to time, test, or determine by means of a clock or watch: The racehorse was clocked at two minutes thirty seconds. |
| 8. | Slang. to strike sharply or heavily: Somebody clocked him on the face. |
—Verb phrases| 9. | clock in, to begin wo
62c
rk, esp. by punching a time clock: She clocked in at 9 on the dot. |
| 10. | clock out, to end work, esp. by punching a time clock: He clocked out early yesterday. |
—Idioms| 11. | around the clock, | a. | during all 24 hours; ceaselessly. |
| b. | without stopping for rest; tirelessly: working around the clock to stem the epidemic. |
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| 12. | clean (someone's) clock, to defeat; vanquish. |
| 13. | kill the clock, Sports. to use up as much game time as possible when one is winning, as to protect a lead in basketball, ice hockey, or football. Also, run out the clock. |
| 14. | stop the clock, to postpone an official or legal deadline by ceasing to count the hours that elapse, as when a new union contract must be agreed upon before an old contract runs out. |
| From Dictionary
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