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Gray   /greɪ/   Listen
Gray

noun
1.
A neutral achromatic color midway between white and black.  Synonyms: grayness, grey, greyness.
2.
Clothing that is a grey color.  Synonym: grey.
3.
Any organization or party whose uniforms or badges are grey.  Synonym: grey.
4.
Horse of a light gray or whitish color.  Synonym: grey.
5.
The SI unit of energy absorbed from ionizing radiation; equal to the absorption of one joule of radiation energy by one kilogram of matter; one gray equals 100 rad.  Synonym: Gy.
6.
English radiobiologist in whose honor the gray (the SI unit of energy for the absorbed dose of radiation) was named (1905-1965).  Synonym: Louis Harold Gray.
7.
English poet best known for his elegy written in a country churchyard (1716-1771).  Synonym: Thomas Gray.
8.
American navigator who twice circumnavigated the globe and who discovered the Columbia River (1755-1806).  Synonym: Robert Gray.
9.
United States botanist who specialized in North American flora and who was an early supporter of Darwin's theories of evolution (1810-1888).  Synonym: Asa Gray.
adjective
(compar. grayer; superl. grayest)  (Written also grey)
1.
Of an achromatic color of any lightness intermediate between the extremes of white and black.  Synonyms: grayish, grey, greyish.  "Gray flannel suit" , "A man with greyish hair"
2.
Showing characteristics of age, especially having grey or white hair.  Synonyms: gray-haired, gray-headed, grey, grey-haired, grey-headed, grizzly, hoar, hoary, white-haired.  "Nodded his hoary head"
3.
Used to signify the Confederate forces in the American Civil War (who wore grey uniforms).  Synonym: grey.
4.
Intermediate in character or position.  Synonym: grey.
verb
1.
Make grey.  Synonym: grey.
2.
Turn grey.  Synonym: grey.



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"Gray" Quotes from Famous Books



... agreeable; healthy, genuine, authoritative, is the best you can say of it. Yet it may have been, what it is described as being, originally handsome. High enough arched brow, rather copious cheeks and jaws; nose smallish, inclining to be stumpy; large gray eyes, bright with steady fire and life, often enough gloomy and severe, but capable of jolly laughter too. Eyes "naturally with a kind of laugh in them," says Pollnitz;—which laugh can blaze out into fearful thunderous rage, if you give him provocation. Especially ...
— History Of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Volume IV. (of XXI.) - Frederick The Great--Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage--1713-1728 • Thomas Carlyle

... had hardly time to realise what it meant, for the officer signed to the prisoner to kneel down, and he sullenly obeyed, while his lower jaw was working in a mechanical fashion as he kept on grinding his betel-nut. The sun was evidently now well above the horizon, for the gray mist was shot with wondrous hues, and the palm-leaves high overhead were turned to gold. There were sweet musical notes from the jungle mingled with the harsher cries and shrieks of parrots, and with a peculiar ...
— The Rajah of Dah • George Manville Fenn

... day grew. The airy flakes which a traveler—a Rouennais "pur sang"—once likened to a shower of cotton, had ceased to fall; a dirty gray light filtered through the heavy thick clouds which served to heighten the dazzling whiteness of the landscape, where now a long line of trees crusted with icicles would appear, now a cottage ...
— The Works of Guy de Maupassant, Vol. 1 (of 8) - Boule de Suif and Other Stories • Guy de Maupassant

... gallery and the vast hall which, by the dim twilights, I had paced with a religious awe, and looked upon the pictured forms of my bold fathers, and mused high and ardently upon my destiny to be; the old gray tower which I had consecrated to myself, and the unwitnessed path which led to the yellow beach, and the wide gladness of the solitary sea; the little arbour which my earliest ambition had reared, that looked out upon the joyous flowers and the merry fountain, and, through the ivy and ...
— Devereux, Complete • Edward Bulwer-Lytton

... 88, 118) also contains Mr. H. Gray's Fifth Report on the gradual exploration of the Roman amphitheatre and the underlying prehistoric remains at Maumbury Rings, Dorchester—now substantially concluded—and an interesting little note on the New Forest pottery-works by ...
— Roman Britain in 1914 • F. Haverfield


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