grand
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 7
- Words With Friends
- 9
- Letters
- 5
Definition of grand
14 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included
adj
-
(augmentative)Large, senior (high-ranking), intense, extreme, or exceptional
“among the grandest orchestras of our time”
“The Grand Viziers of the Ottoman Empire.”
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adj
-
(augmentative)Large, senior (high-ranking), intense, extreme, or exceptional
“among the grandest orchestras of our time”
“The Grand Viziers of the Ottoman Empire.”
-
(augmentative)Large, senior (high-ranking), intense, extreme, or exceptional
“a grand mountain”
“a grand army”
“a grand mistake”
-
(augmentative)Large, senior (high-ranking), intense, extreme, or exceptional
“a grand monarch”
“a grand view”
“His simple vision has transformed into something far more grand.”
“In the mean time, Cluffe had arrived. He was a little bit huffed and grand at being nailed as an evidence, upon a few words carelessly, or, if you will, confidentially dropped at his own mess-table, where Lowe chanced to be a guest; and certainly with no suspicion that his little story could in any way be made to elucidate the mystery of Sturk's murder.”
-
(augmentative)Large, senior (high-ranking), intense, extreme, or exceptional
“a grand lodge”
“a grand vizier”
“a grand piano”
-
Standing in the second or some more remote degree of parentage or descent (see grand-).
“grandfather, grandson, grand-child”
-
(Ireland, Northern-England, colloquial)Fine; lovely.
“A cup of tea? That'd be grand.”
- Containing all the parts proper to a given form of composition.
noun
-
A thousand of some unit of currency, such as dollars or pounds. (Compare G.)
“For quotations using this term, see Citations:grand.”
-
(colloquial)A thousand RPM.
“One grand, two grand RPM”
“The engine, with more compression, carburetion, and cam timing than the Ambassador, could lounge comfortably below four grand and then rush to 7500 rpm, aided and abetted by a light flywheel and a close-ratio five-speed box.”
- A grand piano
-
A grandparent or grandchild.
“Once, in Maryland, he met four families of slaves who had all been together for a hundred years: great-grands, grands, mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins, children.”
“Her granddaughter and great-granddaughter went with us as chaperones. Did I ever tell you that she had six grands and two great-grands? […] And Emily agrees with me it's a shame that I don't even have a grand.”
name
- (countable, uncountable)A placename
- (countable, uncountable)A placename
- (countable)A surname.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English grand, grond, graund, graunt, from Anglo-Norman graunt, from Old French grant, from Latin grandis. Doublet of grande and grandee.
Words you can make from grand
25 playable · top: DANG (6 pts)
Best play dang 6 points4-letter words
8 words3-letter words
10 words2-letter words
6 wordsHooks
1 extension · 1 back
A single letter you can add to grand to make another valid word.
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