load
1load
noun \ˈlōd\Definition of LOAD
1
a : the quantity that can be carried at one time by a specified means; especially : a measured quantity of a commodity fixed for each type of carrier —often used in combination <a boatload of tourists> b : whatever is put on a person or pack animal to be carried : pack c : whatever is put in a ship or vehicle or airplane for conveyance : cargo; especially : a quantity of material assembled or packed as a shipping unit
2
a : a mass or weight supported by something <branches bent low by their load of fruit> b : the forces to which a structure is subjected due to superposed weight or to wind pressure on the vertical surfaces; broadly : the forces to which a given object is subjected
3
a : something that weighs down the mind or spirits <took a load off her mind> b : a burdensome or laborious responsibility <always carried his share of the load>
4
slang : an intoxicating amount of liquor drunk
5
: a large quantity : lot —usually used in plural
6
a : a charge for a firearm b : the quantity of material loaded into a device at one time
7
: external resistance overcome by a machine or prime mover
8
a : power output (as of a power plant) or power consumption (as by a device) b : a device to which power is delivered
9
a (1) : the amount of work that a person carries or is expected to carry (2) : the amount of authorized work to be performed by a machine, a group, a department, or a factory b : the demand on the operating resources of a system (as a telephone exchange or a refrigerating apparatus)
10
slang : eyeful —used in the phrase get a load of
11
: the amount of a deleterious microorganism, parasite, growth, or substance present in a human or animal body <measure viral load in the blood> <the worm load in rats> —called also burden
12
: an amount added (as to the price of a security or the net premium in insurance) to represent selling expense and profit to the distributor
13
Examples of LOAD
- He lifted the load onto his shoulders.
- She was carrying a heavy load of legal documents in her briefcase.
- He picked up a load of firewood and carried it into the house.
- The truck was carrying a full load of sand.
- Losing weight will lessen the load on your knees.
- His death is a heavy load to bear.
Origin of LOAD
Middle English lod, from Old English lād support, carrying — more at lode
First Known Use: 12th century
Related to LOAD
Related Words: consignment; boatload, carload, shipload, trainload, truckload, wagonload; ballast, deadweight; overload, surcharge; bale, bundle, pack, package, packet, parcel, shipment; manifest; body, bulk, mass
Near Antonyms: atom, crumb, dot, fleck, flyspeck, fragment, grain, granule, iota, jot, modicum, molecule, mote, nubbin, particle, ray, scintilla, scrap, shred, tittle, whit; smatter, smattering; dash, drop, morsel, shot; piece, portion, section; absence, dearth, famine, lack, paucity, poverty, scarceness, scarcity, shortage, undersupply, want; deficiency, deficit, inadequacy, insufficiency, meagerness, scantiness, scantness, skimpiness
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