different between smear vs run

smear

English

Etymology

From Middle English smeren, smerien, from Old English smerian, smyrian, smierwan (to anoint or rub with grease, oil, etc.), from Proto-Germanic *smirwijan?. Cognate with Saterland Frisian smeere, Dutch smeren, Low German smeren, German schmieren.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) enPR: smî, IPA(key): /sm??/
  • (US) enPR: smîr, IPA(key): /smi?/, IPA(key): /sm??/
  • Rhymes: -??(r)

Verb

smear (third-person singular simple present smears, present participle smearing, simple past and past participle smeared)

  1. (transitive) To spread (a substance, especially one that colours or is dirty) across a surface by rubbing.
    Synonyms: apply, daub, plaster, spread
    The artist smeared paint over the canvas in broad strokes.
    • 1776, Oliver Goldsmith, A Survey of Experimental Philosophy, London: T. Carnan and F. Newbery, Chapter 5, p. 74,[2]
      In general, all bodies whose surfaces are even will [] stick to each other, and if a liquid be smeared over either surface, their cohesion will be still the stronger.
    • 2019, Ocean Vuong, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, New York: Penguin,[3]
      Then you would kneel and smear a handful of pomade through my hair, comb it over.
  2. (transitive) To cover (a surface with a layer of some substance) by rubbing.
    Synonyms: bedaub, coat, cover, daub, layer, plaster
    She smeared her lips with lipstick.
    • c. 1605, William Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act II, Scene 2,[4]
      Why did you bring these daggers from the place?
      They must lie there: go carry them; and smear
      The sleepy grooms with blood.
    • 1667, John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book 10 [11], lines 725-727,[5]
      [] a Vessel of huge bulk,
      Measur’d by Cubit, length, & breadth, and highth,
      Smeard round with Pitch,
    • 1964, Christopher Isherwood, A Single Man, London: Vintage, 2010, p. 53,[6]
      [] it’s better if we admit to disliking and hating them, than if we try to smear our feelings over with pseudo-liberal sentimentality.
  3. (transitive) To make something dirty.
    Synonyms: besmirch, dirty, soil, sully
    • 1583, Arthur Golding (translator), The Sermons of M. John Calvin upon the Fifth Book of Moses called Deuteronomie, London: George Bishop, Sermon 41, p. 246,[7]
      A man may bee smeared or grimed, and euerie man shall laugh at him, and yet he himselfe shall not perceiue it a whit.
    • 1855, Elizabeth Gaskill, North and South, London: Chapman and Hall, Volume 2, Chapter 11, p. 147,[8]
      [] she returned, carrying Johnnie, his face all smeared with eating,
    • 2016, Ali Smith, Autumn, Penguin, 2017, Chapter 2,[9]
      His hands and forearms, his face, his good shirt and suit are smeared from the dustbins and climbing the fence,
  4. (transitive) (of a substance, etc.) To make a surface dirty by covering it.
    • 1897, Bram Stoker, Dracula, New York: Grosset & Dunlap, Chapter 21, p. 263,[10]
      a pallor which was accentuated by the blood which smeared her lips and cheeks and chin
    • 1982, Anne Tyler, Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant, New York: Knopf, 1989, Chapter 6, p. 168,[11]
      a rust spot smearing the back of the sink
    • 2004, Alan Hollinghurst, The Line of Beauty, New York: Bloomsbury, Chapter 12, p. 323,[12]
      Wet leaves smeared the pavement.
  5. (transitive) To damage someone's reputation by slandering, misrepresenting, or otherwise making false accusations about them, their statements, or their actions.
    Synonyms: badmouth, besmirch, defame, sully, vilify
    The opposition party attempted to smear the candidate by spreading incorrect and unverifiable rumors about their personal behavior.
    • 1914, James Joyce, “Ivy Day in the Committee Room” in Dubliners, London: Grant Richards, p. 164,[13]
      May everlasting shame consume
      The memory of those who tried
      To befoul and smear th’ exalted name
      Of one who spurned them in his pride.
    • 1976, Ng?g? wa Thiong'o, “J.M.—A Writer’s Tribute” in Writers in Politics, London: Heinemann, 1981, p. 82,[14]
      The imperialist foreigners then in the offices of the Nation Newspapers would not allow the African staff to review it. They handled it themselves in order to smear the book and its author and his celebration of Mau Mau resistance.
    • 2018, Richard Powers, The Overstory, New York: Norton, “Neelay Mehta,”[15]
      They’ll smear him on the country’s dial-up bulletin boards as the worst traitor.
  6. (transitive) To cause (something) to be messy or not clear by rubbing and spreading it.
    Synonyms: blur, smudge
    • 1850, Charles Dickens, David Copperfield, London: Bradbury and Evans, Chapter 44, p. 457,[16]
      When she had entered two or three laborious items in the account-book, Jip would walk over the page, wagging his tail, and smear them all out.
    • 1954, J. R. R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring, New York: Ballantine, 1973, Book 2, Chapter 5, p. 419,[17]
      Then there are four lines smeared so that I can only read went 5 days ago.
    • 2007, Tan Twan Eng, The Gift of Rain, New York: Weinstein Books, Book 1, Chapter 5, p. 56,[18]
      Bird droppings, smeared by the strokes of rain and dried by the heat, streaked its sides.
  7. (intransitive) To become messy or not clear by being spread.
    Synonym: smudge
    The paint is still wet — don't touch it or it will smear.
  8. (transitive) To write or draw (something) by spreading a substance on a surface.
    • 1970, Saul Bellow, Mr. Sammler’s Planet, New York: Fawcett, 1971, Chapter 2, p. 84,[19]
      ciphers smeared on the windows of condemned shops
    • 1985, Don DeLillo, White Noise, Penguin, Part 3, Chapter 39, p. 311,[20]
      smear crude words on the walls in the victim’s own blood as evidence of his final cult-related frenzy
    • 2001, Richard Flanagan, Gould’s Book of Fish, New York: Grove Press, 2002, “The Freshwater Crayfish,”[21]
      [] she brought a red daubed finger up to my cheek & began to smear markings on my face.
  9. (transitive) To cause (something) to be a particular colour by covering with a substance.
    • 1864, Richard F. Burton, A Mission to Gelele, King of Dahome, London: Tinsley Brothers, Volume 1, Chapter 3, p. 43,[22]
      small wooden dolls smeared red as though with blood
    • 1917, William Carlos Williams, “Pastoral” in Al Que Quiere!, Boston: The Four Seas Company, p. 15,[23]
      the fences and outhouses
      built of barrel-staves
      and parts of boxes, all,
      if I am fortunate,
      smeared a bluish green
    • 1993, Vikram Seth, A Suitable Boy, Penguin, 1994, Chapter 2.1, p. 73,[24]
      They paid the tonga-wallah double his regular fare and smeared his forehead pink and that of his horse green for good measure.
  10. (transitive) To rub (a body part, etc.) across a surface.
    • 1861, Charles Dickens, Great Expectations, London: Chapman and Hall, Volume 1, Chapter 3, p. 37,[25]
      [] he smeared his ragged rough sleeve over his eyes.
    • 1979, William Styron, Sophie’s Choice, New York: Random House, Chapter 3, p. 58,[26]
      With the lazy appetite of a calf mooning over a salt lick, he smeared his sizable nose against her face,
    • 2013, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Americanah, New York: Knopf, Chapter 6, p. 74,[27]
      [] what was it with all those village people who could not stand on their feet without reaching out to smear their palm on a wall?
  11. (transitive) To attempt to remove (a substance) from a surface by rubbing.
    • 1839, Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist, London: Richard Bentley, Volume 1, Chapter 13, p. 198,[28]
      He had [] a dirty belcher handkerchief round his neck, with the long frayed ends of which he smeared the beer from his face as he spoke:
    • 1926, D. H. Lawrence, The Plumed Serpent, London: Heinemann, 1955, Chapter 5, p. 85,[29]
      The boatman rowed short and hard [] , only pausing at moments swiftly to smear the sweat from his face with an old rag he kept on the bench beside him.
    • 1960, Katherine Anne Porter, “Holiday” in Douglas and Sylvia Angus (eds.), Contemporary American Short Stories, New York: Ballantine, 1983, p. 323,[30]
      [] she stood and shook with silent crying, smearing away her tears with the open palm of her hand.
  12. (climbing) To climb without using footholds, using the friction from the shoe to stay on the wall.

Derived terms

  • asmear
  • besmear
  • smearer

Translations

Noun

smear (countable and uncountable, plural smears)

  1. A mark made by smearing.
    Synonym: streak
    This detergent cleans windows without leaving smears.
    • 1886, Thomas Hardy, The Mayor of Casterbridge, London: Smith, Elder, Volume 2, Chapter 8, p. 108,[31]
      A smear of decisive lead-coloured paint had been laid on to obliterate Henchard’s name, though its letters dimly loomed through like ships in a fog.
    • 1933, Robert Byron, First Russia, Then Tibet, London: Macmillan, Part 2, Chapter 8,[32]
      Vast avalanches had left their dirty smears on the opposing slopes,
    • 1952, Nevil Shute, The Far Country, London: Heinemann, Chapter 2,[33]
      she bought a couple of rolls filled with a thin smear of potted meat for her breakfast
    • 2005, John Banville, The Sea, London: Picador, Part 2, p. 228,[34]
      I could see the roofs of the town on the horizon, and farther off and higher up, a tiny silver ship propped motionless on a smear of pale sea.
  2. (countable, uncountable) A false or unsupported, malicious statement intended to injure a person's reputation.
    Synonyms: calumny, slander, slur, mudslinging
    • 1752, Theophilus Cibber, A Lick at a Liar, London: R. Griffiths, p. 7,[35]
      I should have held him quite beneath my Notice, as is all he utters, but that the Appetite of Slander, in many, is too predominant; and, ’tis possible, when the filthiest Fellow throws a Profusion of Dirt, some may chance to stick, if not timely thrown off; I shall endeavour therefore, to wipe away the sooty Smears of this Chimney-sweeper, by relating a simple Fact, which will, I flatter myself, amply confute the malicious Tales of this unprovoked, rancorous Mortal:
  3. (biology) A preparation to be examined under a microscope, made by spreading a thin layer of a substance (such as blood, bacterial culture) on a slide.
    Synonym: squash
  4. (medicine) A Pap smear (screening test for cervical cancer).
    Synonyms: cervical smear, Pap test
    I'm going to the doctor's this afternoon for a smear.
  5. (radio, television, uncountable) Any of various forms of distortion that make a signal harder to see or hear.
    • 1954, Radio & Television News: Radio-electronic engineering section
      In television terms, a certain amount of smear, ringing, and anticipatory overshoot are indigenous to VSB transmission.
    • 1972, Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports
      Results show the reduction in intelligibility produced by changing the filter condition was much greater than reductions caused by altering smear duration.
  6. (climbing) A maneuver in which the shoe is placed onto the holdless rock, and the friction from the shoe keeps it in contact
  7. (music) A rough glissando in jazz music.

Derived terms

  • cervical smear
  • smear campaign
  • smear case
  • smeary

Translations

References

Anagrams

  • MASER, Mares, Marse, mares, marse, maser, mears, rames, reams

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run

English

Alternative forms

  • rin (dialectal)

Etymology

From Middle English runnen, rennen (to run), alteration (due to the past participle runne, runnen,yronne) of Middle English rinnen (to run), from Old English rinnan, iernan (to run) and Old Norse rinna (to run), both from Proto-Germanic *rinnan? (to run) (compare also *rannijan? (to make run)), from Proto-Indo-European *h?reyH- (to boil, churn). Cognate with Scots rin (to run), West Frisian rinne (to walk, march), Dutch rennen (to run, race), German rennen (to run, race), rinnen (to flow), Danish rende (to run), Swedish ränna (to run), Icelandic renna (to flow). Non-Germanic cognates include Albanian rend (to run, run after). See random.

Pronunciation

  • (US, UK) IPA(key): /??n/
  • (Northern England) IPA(key): /??n/
  • Rhymes: -?n

Verb

run (third-person singular simple present runs, present participle running, simple past ran, past participle run)

  1. To move swiftly.
    1. (intransitive) To move forward quickly upon two feet by alternately making a short jump off either foot. (Compare walk.)
      • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:run.
    2. (intransitive) To go at a fast pace, to move quickly.
    3. (transitive) To cause to move quickly or lightly.
    4. (transitive) To transport someone or something, notionally at a brisk pace.
    5. (transitive or intransitive) To compete in a race.
    6. (intransitive) Of fish, to migrate for spawning.
    7. (American football, transitive or intransitive) To carry (a football) down the field, as opposed to passing or kicking.
    8. (transitive) To achieve or perform by running or as if by running.
    9. (intransitive) To flee from a danger or towards help.
    10. (figuratively, transitive) To go through without stopping, usually illegally.
    11. (transitive, juggling, colloquial) To juggle a pattern continuously, as opposed to starting and stopping quickly.
  2. (fluids) To flow.
    1. (intransitive) Of a liquid, to flow.
    2. (intransitive, figuratively) To move or spread quickly.
    3. (intransitive) Of an object, to have a liquid flowing from it.
    4. (transitive) To make a liquid flow; to make liquid flow from an object.
    5. (intransitive) To become liquid; to melt.
    6. (intransitive) To leak or spread in an undesirable fashion; to bleed (especially used of dye or paint).
    7. To fuse; to shape; to mould; to cast.
  3. (nautical, of a vessel) To sail before the wind, in distinction from reaching or sailing close-hauled.
  4. (transitive) To control or manage, be in charge of.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:run.
  5. (intransitive) To be a candidate in an election.
  6. To make participate in certain kinds of competitions
    1. (transitive) To make run in a race.
    2. (transitive) To make run in an election.
  7. To exert continuous activity; to proceed.
  8. (intransitive) To be presented in the media.
  9. (transitive) To print or broadcast in the media.
  10. (transitive) To smuggle (illegal goods).
  11. (transitive, agriculture) To sort through a large volume of produce in quality control.
  12. To extend or persist, statically or dynamically, through space or time.
    1. (intransitive) To extend in space or through a range (often with a measure phrase).
    2. (intransitive) To extend in time, to last, to continue (usually with a measure phrase).
    3. (transitive) To make something extend in space.
    4. (intransitive) Of a machine, including computer programs, to be operating or working normally.
    5. (transitive) To make a machine operate.
  13. (transitive) To execute or carry out a plan, procedure, or program.
  14. To pass or go quickly in thought or conversation.
  15. (copulative) To become different in a way mentioned (usually to become worse).
    • 1968, Paul Simon, The Boxer (song)
      I was no more than a boy / In the company of strangers / In the quiet of the railway station / Running scared.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:run.
  16. (transitive) To cost a large amount of money.
  17. (intransitive) Of stitches or stitched clothing, to unravel.
  18. To pursue in thought; to carry in contemplation.
  19. To cause to enter; to thrust.
    • There was also hairdressing: hairdressing, too, really was hairdressing in those times — no running a comb through it and that was that. It was curled, frizzed, waved, put in curlers overnight, waved with hot tongs; [].
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:run.
  20. To drive or force; to cause, or permit, to be driven.
    • They ran the ship aground.
  21. To cause to be drawn; to mark out; to indicate; to determine.
  22. To encounter or incur (a danger or risk).
    • 1625, Francis Bacon, Of Friendship
      He runneth two dangers.
  23. To put at hazard; to venture; to risk.
    • He would himself be in the Highlands to receive them, and run his fortune with them.
  24. To tease with sarcasms and ridicule.
  25. To sew (a seam) by passing the needle through material in a continuous line, generally taking a series of stitches on the needle at the same time.
  26. To control or have precedence in a card game.
  27. To be in form thus, as a combination of words.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:run.
  28. (archaic) To be popularly known; to be generally received.
    • Neither was he ignorant what report ran of himselfe.
  29. To have growth or development.
    • or the Richness of the Ground cause them [turnips] to run too much to Leaves
  30. To tend, as to an effect or consequence; to incline.
    • 1625, Francis Bacon, Of Nature In Men
      A man's nature runs either to herbs or weeds.
  31. To have a legal course; to be attached; to continue in force, effect, or operation; to follow; to go in company.
    • c. 1665, Josiah Child, Discourse on Trade
      Customs run only upon our goods imported or exported, and that but once for all; whereas interest runs as well upon our ships as goods, and must be yearly paid.
  32. To encounter or suffer (a particular, usually bad, fate or misfortune).
    • 1748, Samuel Richardson, Clarissa, I.8:
      Don't let me run the fate of all who show indulgence to your sex […].
  33. (golf) To strike (the ball) in such a way as to cause it to run along the ground, as when approaching a hole.
  34. (video games, rare) To speedrun.
Conjugation

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Noun

run (plural runs)

  1. Act or instance of running, of moving rapidly using the feet.
    I just got back from my morning run.
  2. Act or instance of hurrying (to or from a place) (not necessarily on foot); dash or errand, trip.
    • 1759, N. Tindal, The Continuation of Mr Rapin's History of England, volume 21 (continuation volume 9), page 92:
      [] and on the 18th of January this squadron put to sea. The first place of rendezvous was the boy of port St. Julian, upon the coast of Patagonia, and all accidents were provided against with admirable foresight. Their run to port St. Julian was dangerous []
    I need to make a run to the store.
  3. A pleasure trip.
    Let's go for a run in the car.
    • And I think of giving her a run in London for a change.
  4. Flight, instance or period of fleeing.
  5. Migration (of fish).
  6. A group of fish that migrate, or ascend a river for the purpose of spawning.
  7. A literal or figurative path or course for movement relating to:
    1. A (regular) trip or route.
      The bus on the Cherry Street run is always crowded.
      • 1977, Star Wars (film)
        You've never heard of the Millennium Falcon? It's the ship that made the Kessel Run in less than twelve parsecs.
    2. The route taken while running or skiing.
      Which run did you do today?
    3. (skiing, bobsledding) A single trip down a hill, as in skiing and bobsledding.
    4. The distance sailed by a ship.
      a good run; a run of fifty miles
    5. A voyage.
      a run to China
    6. A trial.
      The data got lost, so I'll have to perform another run of the experiment.
    7. (mathematics, computing) The execution of a program or model
      This morning's run of the SHIPS statistical model gave Hurricane Priscilla a 74% chance of gaining at least 30 knots of intensity in 24 hours, reconfirmed by the HMON and GFS dynamical models.
    8. (video games) A playthrough, or attempted playthrough; a session of play.
      This was my first successful run without losing any health.
  8. Unrestricted use. Only used in have the run of.
    He can have the run of the house.
  9. An enclosure for an animal; a track or path along which something can travel.
    He set up a rabbit run.
  10. (Australia, New Zealand) Rural landholding for farming, usually for running sheep, and operated by a runholder.
  11. State of being current; currency; popularity.
    • Template:RQ:Addison Freeloader
      It is impossible for detached papers[...] to have a general run, or long continuance, if they are not diversified[...].
  12. Continuous or sequential
    1. A continuous period (of time) marked by a trend; a period marked by a continuing trend.
      I’m having a run of bad luck.
      He went to Las Vegas and spent all his money over a three-day run.
      • 1796, Edmund Burke, Letters on a Regicide Peace
        They who made their arrangements in the first run of misadventure [...] put a seal on their calamities.
    2. A series of tries in a game that were successful.
    3. A production quantity (such as in a factory).
      Yesterday we did a run of 12,000 units.
      The book’s initial press run will be 5,000 copies.
    4. The period of showing of a play, film, TV series, etc.
      The run of the show lasted two weeks, and we sold out every night.
      It is the last week of our French cinema run.
    5. (slang) A period of extended (usually daily) drug use.
      • 1964 : Heroin by The Velvet Underground
        And I'll tell ya, things aren't quite the same / When I'm rushing on my run.
      • 1975, Lloyd Y. Young, Mary Anne Koda-Kimble, Brian S. Katcher, Applied Therapeutics for Clinical Pharmacists
        Frank Fixwell, a 25 year-old male, has been on a heroin "run" (daily use) for the past two years.
      • 1977, Richard P. Rettig, Manual J. Torres, Gerald R. Garrett, Manny: a criminal-addict's story, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH) ?ISBN
        I was hooked on dope, and hooked bad, during this whole period, but I was also hooked behind robbery. When you're on a heroin run, you stay loaded so long as you can score.
      • 2001, Robin J. Harman, Handbook of Pharmacy Health Education, Pharmaceutical Press ?ISBN, page 172
        This can develop quite quickly (over a matter of hours) during a cocaine run or when cocaine use becomes a daily habit.
      • 2010, Robert DuPont, The Selfish Brain: Learning from Addiction, Hazelden Publishing ?ISBN, page 158
        DA depletion leads to the crash that characteristically ends a cocaine run.
    6. (card games) A sequence of cards in a suit in a card game.
    7. (music) A rapid passage in music, especially along a scale.
  13. A flow of liquid; a leak.
    The constant run of water from the faucet annoys me.
    a run of must in wine-making
    the first run of sap in a maple orchard
  14. (chiefly eastern Midland US, especially Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia) A small creek or part thereof. (Compare Southern US branch and New York and New England brook.)
    The military campaign near that creek was known as "The battle of Bull Run".
  15. A quick pace, faster than a walk.
    He broke into a run.
    1. (of horses) A fast gallop.
  16. A sudden series of demands on a bank or other financial institution, especially characterised by great withdrawals.
    Financial insecurity led to a run on the banks, as customers feared for the security of their savings.
  17. Any sudden large demand for something.
    There was a run on Christmas presents.
  18. Various horizontal dimensions or surfaces
    1. The top of a step on a staircase, also called a tread, as opposed to the rise.
    2. The horizontal length of a set of stairs
    3. (construction) Horizontal dimension of a slope.
  19. A standard or unexceptional group or category.
    He stood out from the usual run of applicants.
  20. In sports
    1. (baseball) A score when a runner touches all bases legally; the act of a runner scoring.
    2. (cricket) The act of passing from one wicket to another; the point scored for this.
    3. (American football) A running play.
      [...] one of the greatest runs of all time.
    4. (golf) The movement communicated to a golf ball by running it.
    5. (golf) The distance a ball travels after touching the ground from a stroke.
    6. The distance drilled with a bit, in oil drilling.
      • 1832, Records and Briefs of the United States Supreme Court (page 21)
        Well, when you compare the cone type with the cross roller bit, you get a longer run, there is less tendency of the bit to go flat while running in various formations. It cleans itself better.
  21. A line of knit stitches that have unravelled, particularly in a nylon stocking.
    I have a run in my stocking.
  22. (nautical) The stern of the underwater body of a ship from where it begins to curve upward and inward.
  23. (mining) The horizontal distance to which a drift may be carried, either by licence of the proprietor of a mine or by the nature of the formation; also, the direction which a vein of ore or other substance takes.
  24. A pair or set of millstones.

Synonyms

  • (horizontal part of a step): tread
  • (unravelling): ladder (British)
  • (computing): execute, start
  • See also Thesaurus:walk

Antonyms

  • (horizontal part of a step): rise, riser
  • (horizontal distance of a set of stairs): rise

Derived terms

Translations

See also

  • (computer science): trajectory

Adjective

run (not comparable)

  1. In a liquid state; melted or molten.
    Put some run butter on the vegetables.
    • 1921, L. W. Ferris, H. W. Redfield and W. R. North, The Volatile Acids and the Volatile Oxidizable Substances of Cream and Experimental Butter, in the Journal of Dairy Science, volume 4 (1921), page 522:
      Samples of the regular run butter were sealed in 1 pound tins and sent to Washington, where the butter was scored and examined.
  2. Cast in a mould.
    • 1833, The Cabinet Cyclopaedia: A treatise on the progressive improvement and present state of the Manufactures in Metal, volume 2, Iron and Steel (printed in London), page 314:
      Vast quantities are cast in sand moulds, with that kind of run steel which is so largely used in the production of common table-knives and forks.
    • c. 1839, (Richard of Raindale, The Plan of my House vindicated, quoted by) T. T. B. in the Dwelling of Richard of Raindale, King of the Moors, published in The Mirror, number 966, 7 September 1839, page 153:
      For making tea I have a kettle,
      Besides a pan made of run metal;
      An old arm-chair, in which I sit well —
      The back is round.
  3. Exhausted; depleted (especially with "down" or "out").
  4. (of a zoology) Travelled, migrated; having made a migration or a spawning run.
    • 1889, Henry Cholmondeley-Pennell, Fishing: Salmon and Trout, fifth edition, page 185:
      The temperature of the water is consequently much higher than in either England or Scotland, and many newly run salmon will be found in early spring in the upper waters of Irish rivers where obstructions exist.
    • 2005, Rod Sutterby, Malcolm Greenhalgh, Atlantic Salmon: An Illustrated Natural History, page 86:
      Thus, on almost any day of the year, a fresh-run salmon may be caught legally somewhere in the British Isles.
  5. Smuggled.
    run brandy

Verb

run

  1. past participle of rin

Anagrams

  • Nur, URN, nur, urn

Dutch

Pronunciation

Verb

run

  1. first-person singular present indicative of runnen
  2. imperative of runnen

Gothic

Romanization

run

  1. Romanization of ????????????

Mandarin

Romanization

run

  1. Nonstandard spelling of rún.
  2. Nonstandard spelling of rùn.

Usage notes

  • English transcriptions of Mandarin speech often fail to distinguish between the critical tonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without the appropriate indication of tone.

Norman

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun

run m (plural runs)

  1. (nautical) beam (of a ship)

Old English

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *r?n?. Cognate with the Old Saxon r?na, Old High German r?na (German Raun), Old Norse rún, and Gothic ???????????????? (runa).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ru?n/

Noun

r?n f

  1. whisper
  2. rune
  3. mystery, secret
  4. advice
  5. writing

Declension

Derived terms

  • ?er?ne
  • r?nere
  • r?nian

Descendants

  • Middle English: roun
    • Scots: rune, roun, round
    • English: roun, round

See also

  • dierne (adjective)

Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /run/

Noun

run n

  1. genitive plural of runo

Noun

run f

  1. genitive plural of runa

Further reading

  • run in Polish dictionaries at PWN

Vietnamese

Etymology

From Proto-Vietic *-ru?n.

Pronunciation

  • (Hà N?i) IPA(key): [zun??]
  • (Hu?) IPA(key): [?un??]
  • (H? Chí Minh City) IPA(key): [??w??m??]

Verb

run • (?, ?, ?, ????)

  1. to tremble, to shiver (due to cold)

Derived terms

Related terms

  • rung (to shake)

run From the web:

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  • what running does to your body
  • what running shoes should i buy
  • what runs horizontally and is identified with numbers
  • what runs on gas in a house
  • what runs you
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