English ground definition
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English grounde, from Old English grund, from Proto-Germanic *grunduz. Cognate with West Frisian grûn, Dutch grond and German Grund.
Alternative forms
- GND (contraction used in electronics)
Noun
ground (countable and uncountable, plural grounds)
- The surface of the Earth, as opposed to the sky or water or underground.
Look, I found a ten dollar bill on the ground!
1918, W[illiam] B[abington] Maxwell, chapter XXIII, in The Mirror and the Lamp, Indianapolis, Ind.: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, →OCLC:If the afternoon was fine they strolled together in the park, very slowly, and with pauses to draw breath wherever the ground sloped upward. The slightest effort made the patient cough.
1977, Agatha Christie, chapter 4, in An Autobiography, part II, London: Collins, →ISBN:Mind you, clothes were clothes in those days. […] Frills, ruffles, flounces, lace, complicated seams and gores: not only did they sweep the ground and have to be held up in one hand elegantly as you walked along, but they had little capes or coats or feather boas.
2013 June 8, “The new masters and commanders”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8839, page 52:From the ground, Colombo’s port does not look like much. Those entering it are greeted by wire fences, walls dating back to colonial times and security posts.
- (uncountable) Terrain.
1971, “The development of terrain following radar: an account of the progress made with an airborne guidance system for low flying military aircraft”, in Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology:As the terrain-following radar scans the ground ahead of the aircraft the actual clearance height is measured by the radio altimeter.
- Soil, earth.
The worm crawls through the ground.
- (countable) The bottom of a body of water.
- Basis, foundation, groundwork, legwork.
c. 1503–1512, John Skelton, Ware the Hauke; republished in John Scattergood, editor, John Skelton: The Complete English Poems, 1983, →OCLC, page 62, lines 11–14:Wyth cry unreverent,
Before the sacrament,
Wythin the holy church bowndis,
That of our fayth the grownd is.
1840, Lewis Rose, chapter III, in An Humble Attempt to Put an End to the Present Divisions in the Church of Scotland, and to Promote Her Usefulness. […] [1], Glasgow: George Gallie, →OCLC, page 51:[B]e the consequences what they may, they shall not move an inch, nor a hair's-breadth from the ground of their groundless spiritual independence, […]
- (chiefly in the plural) Reason, (epistemic) justification, cause.
You will need to show good grounds for your action.
He could not come on grounds of health, or on health grounds.
- Background, context, framework, surroundings.
- (historical) The area on which a battle is fought, particularly as referring to the area occupied by one side or the other. Often, according to the eventualities, "to give ground" or "to gain ground".
- (figurative, by extension) Advantage given or gained in any contest; e.g. in football, chess, debate or academic discourse.
- (in combination) A place suited to a specified activity.
a forest traditionally used as a hunting-ground
1876, Parliamentary Papers, volume 14, Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons, page 147:I gather from your last answer that at the present time the constabulary, to a certain extent, is good recruiting ground for the army?
- The plain surface upon which the figures of an artistic composition are set.
crimson flowers on a white ground
1941 December, “The Why and the Wherefore: Cornish names of G.W.R. locomotives”, in Railway Magazine, page 575:One and All is the motto of the County of Cornwall, used below the coat-of-arms, which is a shield embracing fifteen bezants, or golden roundels, on a black ground; [...].
- (sculpture) A flat surface upon which figures are raised in relief.
- (point lace) The net of small meshes upon which the embroidered pattern is applied.
- Brussels ground
- (etching) A gummy substance spread over the surface of a metal to be etched, to prevent the acid from eating except where an opening is made by the needle.
- (architecture, chiefly in the plural) One of the pieces of wood, flush with the plastering, to which mouldings etc. are attached.
Grounds are usually put up first and the plastering floated flush with them.
- (countable) A soccer stadium.
Manchester United's ground is known as Old Trafford.
- (electricity, Canada and US) An electrical conductor connected to the earth, or a large conductor whose electrical potential is taken as zero (such as a steel chassis).
1961, “GROUND”, in The International Dictionary of Physics and Electronics, 2nd edition, Princeton, NJ: D. Van Nostrand, page 539:А ground may be undesirable, inadvertent, or accidental path taken by an electrical current; or it may be the deliberate provision of conductors well connected to the ground by means of plates buried therein, or similar device.
- (electricity, Philippines) Electric shock.
- (countable, cricket) The area of grass on which a match is played (a cricket field); the entire arena in which it is played; the part of the field behind a batsman's popping crease where he can not be run out (hence to make one's ground).
- (music) A composition in which the bass, consisting of a few bars of independent notes, is continually repeated to a varying melody.
- (music) The tune on which descants are raised; the plain song.
c. 1593 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedy of Richard the Third: […]”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene vii]:Buck[ingham] The Mayor is here at hand; pretend ſome fear, // Be not you ſpoke with, but by mighty ſuit; // And look you get a prayer-book in your hand, // And ſtand between two churchmen, good my lord, // For on that ground I’ll build a holy deſcant: // And be not eaſily won to our requeſts: // Play the maid’s part, ſtill anſwer nay, and take it.
- The pit of a theatre.
- (India, obsolete) Synonym of munny (“land measure”)
1885, Manual of the Administration of the Madras Presidency, page 515:It is sub-divided into annas (or 16ths), of 3,600 square feet each; or when the land is for building purposes, into grounds (munnies) of 1/24 of a cawny each, as in the town of Madras.
Synonyms
- (electricity) earth (British)
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Translations
surface of the Earth
- Apache:
- Western Apache: niʼ
- Arabic: أَرْض (ar) f (ʔarḍ)
- Armenian: գետին (hy) (getin)
- Azerbaijani: yer (az)
- Baluchi: زمین (zamín)
- Belarusian: зямля́ f (zjamljá), грунт m (hrunt)
- Bulgarian: земя́ (bg) f (zemjá)
- Catalan: terra (ca) m, sòl (ca) m
- Chamicuro: c̈hijta
- Chechen: латта (latta)
- Chinese:
- Dungan: ди (di)
- Mandarin: 地 (zh) (dì)
- Coptic: ⲓⲧⲉⲛ m (iten)
- Czech: země (cs) f
- Danish: grund (da) c
- Dutch: grond (nl) m, bodem (nl) m
- Egyptian: (tꜣ)
- Finnish: maanpinta (fi), maa (fi)
- French: sol (fr) m, terre (fr) f
- Georgian: მიწა (mic̣a), ხმელეთი (xmeleti)
- German: Erde (de) f, Erdboden (de) m, Land (de) n, Grund (de) m, Boden (de) m
- Greek: έδαφος (el) n (édafos)
- Ancient: ἔδαφος n (édaphos)
- Hebrew: קרקע / קַרְקַע (he) f (karká)
- Higaonon: bugta
- Hiligaynon: duta
- Hindi: ज़मीन (hi) f (zamīn), भूतल (hi) m (bhūtal)
- Hungarian: föld (hu)
- Icelandic: grund (is) f
- Irish: talamh m
- Italian: suolo (it) m, superficie (it) f
- Japanese: 地 (ja) (ち, chi), 土 (ja) (つち, tsuchi)
- Javanese: lemah (jv) (ngoko), siti (krama)
- Khmer: ដី (km) (dəy)
- Korean: 땅 (ko) (ttang)
- Lao: ດິນ (lo) (din)
- Latin: solum (la) n
- Lü: ᦡᦲᧃ (ḋiin)
- Macedonian: земја f (zemja)
- Manchu: ᠨᠠ (na), ᡶᠠᠯᠠᠨ (falan)
- Navajo: niʼ
- Norwegian: bakke (no)
- Ojibwe: aki, ᐊᑭ
- Old English: eorþe f
- Old High German: grunt
- Old Portuguese: chão
- Oromo: dachee, lafa
- Persian: زمین (fa) (zamin)
- Plautdietsch: Grunt m, Ieed f
- Polish: ziemia (pl) f
- Portuguese: solo (pt) m, chão (pt)
- Romanian: sol (ro) n, pământ (ro) n pl
- Russian: земля́ (ru) f (zemljá), грунт (ru) m (grunt)
- Sanskrit: भूतल (sa) (bhūtala)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: зѐмља f
- Roman: zèmlja (sh) f
- Sicilian: solu (scn) m
- Slovak: zem (sk) f
- Slovene: zemlja (sl) f
- Spanish: suelo (es) m, tierra (es) f
- Swedish: backe (sv) c, mark (sv) c, grund (sv) c
- Tagalog: lupa (tl)
- Thai: ดิน (th) (din)
- Tocharian A: tkaṃ
- Tocharian B: keṃ
- Ugaritic: 𐎀𐎗𐎕 (ảrṣ)
- Ukrainian: земля́ (uk) f (zemljá), ґрунт (uk) m (grunt)
- Urdu: زمین (ur) f (zamīn), بھوتل (bhūtal)
- West Frisian: grûn (fy)
- Yagara: dhagun
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soil, earth
- Arabic: أَرْض (ar) f (ʔarḍ)
- Armenian: հող (hy) (hoġ)
- Aromanian: pimintu
- Azerbaijani: torpaq (az)
- Belarusian: зямля́ f (zjamljá)
- Bulgarian: земя́ (bg) f (zemjá)
- Burmese: မြေ (my) (mre)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 土 (zh) (tǔ), 地 (zh) (dì), 土壤 (zh) (tǔrǎng)
- Dalmatian: tara f, tiara f
- Dutch: grond (nl) m, aarde (nl) f
- Finnish: maaperä (fi), maa (fi)
- French: terre (fr) f
- Friulian: tiere f
- Galician: terra (gl) f, chan (gl) m
- Georgian: ნიადაგი (niadagi), მიწა (mic̣a)
- German: Erde (de) f, Boden (de) m, Erdreich (de) n
- Greek: έδαφος (el) n (édafos)
- Ancient: ἔδαφος n (édaphos), γῆ f (gê), χθών m (khthṓn)
- Haitian Creole: tè
- Hindi: ज़मीन (hi) f (zamīn)
- Hungarian: föld (hu), (soil) talaj (hu)
- Indonesian: tanah (id)
- Irish: talamh m
- Italian: terra (it) f
- Japanese: 土 (ja) (つち, tsuchi), 地 (ja) (ち, chi), 土壌 (ja) (どじょう, dojō)
- Javanese: lemah (jv) (ngoko), siti (krama)
- Kabuverdianu: txon
- Khmer: ដី (km) (dəy)
- Korean: 땅 (ko) (ttang), 흙 (ko) (heuk), 토양 (ko) (toyang)
- Lao: ດິນ (lo) (din)
- Lombard: tera f
- Macedonian: зе́мја f (zémja)
- Maltese: art f
- Occitan: tèrra (oc) f
- Old English: eorþe f
- Persian: زمین (fa) (zamin)
- Plautdietsch: Ieed f
- Polish: ziemia (pl) f, gleba (pl) f
- Portuguese: solo (pt) m, terra (pt) f
- Romanian: pământ (ro) n
- Russian: земля́ (ru) f (zemljá), по́чва (ru) f (póčva), грунт (ru) m (grunt)
- Sardinian: terra f
- Scottish Gaelic: talamh m or f, ùir f
- Spanish: tierra (es) f
- Swedish: jord (sv) c, mark (sv) c
- Thai: ดิน (th) (din)
- Tocharian A: tkaṃ
- Tocharian B: keṃ
- Ugaritic: 𐎀𐎗𐎕 (ảrṣ)
- Urdu: زمین (ur) f (zamīn)
|
bottom of a body of water
basis, foundation, groundwork
background, context, framework, surroundings
electrical conductor connected to point of
zero potential
- Azerbaijani: torpaqalama, torpağa birşəldirilmə, yerlə birləşdirmə
- Bulgarian: заземяване n (zazemjavane)
- Catalan: punt de terra m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 接地 (zh) (jiēdì), 地線/地线 (zh) (dìxiàn), 接地線/接地线 (zh) (jiēdìxiàn)
- Dutch: aarding (nl) f
- Finnish: maajohdin, maa (fi)
- French: terre (fr) f, masse (fr) f
- German: Erde (de) f, Masseleitung f, Masseverbindung, Erdung (de)
- Greek: γείωση (el) f (geíosi)
- Hungarian: földelés (hu)
- Irish: sreang thalmhaithe f
- Italian: massa (it) f, terra (it) f
- Japanese: 接地 (ja) (せっち, setchi), 地線 (ちせん, chisen)
- Korean: 접지(接地) (jeopji), 어어드 (eo'eodeu), 접지선 (ko) (jeopjiseon)
- Polish: uziemienie n
- Portuguese: terra (pt) f
- Romanian: împământare f
- Russian: заземле́ние (ru) n (zazemlénije), земля́ (ru) f (zemljá) (colloquial)
- Spanish: polo a tierra, toma de tierra f
- Swedish: jord (sv) c, jordledare c
- Tagalog: sayad
|
electrical point of
zero potential
Translations to be checked
See also
Verb
ground (third-person singular simple present grounds, present participle grounding, simple past and past participle grounded)
- (US) To connect (an electrical conductor or device) to a ground.
- Synonym: earth
- (Philippines) To electrocute.
- (transitive) To punish, especially a child or teenager, by forcing them to stay at home and/or give up certain privileges.
- Synonym: gate
If you don't clean your room, I'll have no choice but to ground you.
Eric, you are grounded until further notice for lying to us about where you were last night!
My kids are currently grounded from television.
- (transitive) To forbid (an aircraft or pilot) to fly.
Because of the bad weather, all flights were grounded.
- To give a basic education in a particular subject; to instruct in elements or first principles.
Jim was grounded in maths.
- (baseball) To hit a ground ball. Compare fly (verb (regular)) and line (verb).
2019 March 21, Chris Cwik, “Ichiro Suzuki Goes Out in Style, Retires After Series in Japan”, in Yahoo! Sports[2]:[Ichiro Suzuki] went 0 for 4, popping out in foul territory, grounding out to second, and striking out looking. And then, in the top of the eighth inning with a runner on second, the “True Hit King” grounded out to short, just barely failing to beat it out.
2019 April 10, Ben Walker (AP), “Twins Pitchers Go Wild, Syndergaard and Mets Stroll 9-6”, in Yahoo! Sports[3], archived from the original on 11 April 2019:The Twins scored three times in the eighth to make it 9-4 and loaded the bases with no outs. Jeurys Familia got Willians Astudillo to ground into a double play, limiting the damage.
- To place something on the ground.
- (intransitive) To run aground; to strike the bottom and remain fixed.
The ship grounded on the bar.
- To found; to fix or set, as on a foundation, reason, or principle; to furnish a ground for; to fix firmly.
1859–1860, William Hamilton, edited by H[enry] L[ongueville] Mansel and John Veitch, Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic […], volumes (please specify |volume=I to IV), Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, →OCLC:So far from warranting any inference to the existence of a God, would, on the contrary, ground even an argument to his negation.
- (fine arts) To cover with a ground, as a copper plate for etching, or as paper or other materials with a uniform tint as a preparation for ornament.
- To improve or focus the mental or emotional state of.
I ground myself with meditation.
- (machine learning) To complement a machine learning model with relevant information it was not trained on.
2023, Sina J. Semnani, Violet Z. Yao, Heidi C. Zhang, Monica S. Lam, “WikiChat: A Few-Shot LLM-Based Chatbot Grounded with Wikipedia”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name)[4]:We design WikiChat (Figure 1) to ground LLMs using Wikipedia to achieve the following objectives. While LLMs tend to hallucinate, our chatbot should be factual.
Translations
to connect an electrical conductor
to require a child to remain at home
- Azerbaijani: evdən çıxmaq qadağan etmək, evdən çıxmağı qadağan etmək, evdən çıxmasını qadağan etmək
- Czech: dát domácí vězení
- Dutch: huisarrest geven
- Finnish: pistää kotiarestiin, pistää arestiin
- French: gronder (fr), punir (fr)
- German: Hausarrest geben
- Hungarian: (force to stay at home) szobafogságra ítél, (punish) megbüntet (hu), büntetést ad, (forbid) eltilt (hu), büntetésből eltilt
- Portuguese: deixar de castigo (Brazil), castigar (pt)
- Spanish: castigar (es)
- Swedish: ge husarrest, ge utegångsförbud
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to forbid an aircraft or pilot to fly
to gain a basic education of a particular subject
baseball: to hit a ground ball
cricket: to place a bat, or part of body on the ground to avoid run-out
Etymology 2
Inflected form of grind. See also milled.
Verb
ground
- simple past and past participle of grind
I ground the coffee up nicely.
Adjective
ground (not comparable)
- Crushed, or reduced to small particles.
- Synonym: milled
ground mustard seed
1851, Herman Melville, Moby Dick[5]:Alike, joy and sorrow, hope and fear, seemed ground to finest dust, and powdered, for the time, in the clamped mortar of Ahab's iron soul.
1969, Tulane Studies in Zoology and Botany[6], volume 16, page 16:The intestinal contents of F. Stellifer seem finely ground in comparison to those of F. catenatus, probably as a result of chewing with the stout pharyngeal molars.
2018, S Sivakumar, E Zwier, PB Meisenheimer…, “Bulk and Thin Film Synthesis of Compositionally Variant Entropy-stabilized Oxides”, in Journal of Visualized Experiments:Powder mixing and grinding are complete when the powder is homogenous and grey-black in color, appears finely ground, and feels smooth.
- Processed by grinding.
lenses of ground glass
1985, Sergeĭ Aristarkhovich Semenov, Prehistoric Technology: An Experimental Study of the Oldest Tools and Artefacts from Traces of Manufacture and Wear[7], page 14:the traces of wear have the appearance of dull patches that look ground.
2000, Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland[8], page 258:The axial perforation, the handle socket and the quern base are all rough and do not appear ground or polished
- 2018, H Glimpel, HJ Lauffer, A Bremstahler, Finishing Tool, In Particular End Milling Cutter, US Patent App. 15/764,739
- An advantage of such a finishing tool is that, after the machining, the workpiece has high surface quality. The surface which is produced appears finely ground to polished by means of this procedure.
Derived terms
Translations
crushed or reduced to small particles
Descendants
References
- “ground”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
Anagrams
Middle English ground definition
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Old English grund, from Proto-Germanic *grunduz.
Pronunciation
Noun
ground
- ground
- Earth
Declension
Descendants
References