Crowd
Pronunciation
- IPA: /kɹaʊd/
- Rhymes: -aÊŠd
Origin 1
From Old English crūdan. Cognate with Dutch kruien.
Full definition of crowd
Verb
- (transitive) To push, to press, to shove.
- (transitive) To press or drive together; to mass together.
- ShakespeareCrowd us and crush us.
- (transitive) To fill by pressing or thronging together; hence, to encumber by excess of numbers or quantity.
- PrescottThe balconies and verandas were crowded with spectators, anxious to behold their future sovereign.
- (transitive) To press by solicitation; to urge; to dun; hence, to treat discourteously or unreasonably.
- (nautical) To approach another ship too closely when it has right of way
- (intransitive) To press together or collect in numbers; to swarm; to throng
- AddisonThe whole company crowded about the fire.
- MacaulayImages came crowding on his mind faster than he could put them into words.
- (intransitive) To urge or press forward; to force oneself.A man crowds into a room.
- (nautical) (of a square-rigged ship) (transitive) To carry excessive sail
Noun
crowd
(plural crowds)- A group of people congregated or collected into a close body without order.After the movie let out, a crowd of people pushed through the exit doors.
- 1893, Walter Besant, The Ivory Gate Chapter Prologue, Athelstan Arundel walked home …, foaming and raging....He walked the whole way, walking through crowds, and under the noses of dray-horses, carriage-horses, and cart-horses, without taking the least notice of them.
- Several things collected or closely pressed together; also, some things adjacent to each other.There was a crowd of toys pushed beneath the couch where the children were playing.
- (with definite article) The so-called lower orders of people; the populace, vulgar.
- Alfred Tennyson (1809-1892)To fool the crowd with glorious lies.
- John Dryden (1631-1700)He went not with the crowd to see a shrine.
- A group of people united or at least characterised by a common interest.That obscure author's fans were a nerdy crowd which hardly ever interacted before the Internet age.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Origin 2
Celtic, from Welsh crwth.
Noun
crowd
(plural crowds)- (obsolete) A crwth, an Ancient Celtic plucked string instrument.
- Ben JonsonA lackey that ... can warble upon a crowd a little.
- now dialectal A fiddle.
- 1819: wandering palmers, hedge-priests, Saxon minstrels, and Welsh bards, were muttering prayers, and extracting mistuned dirges from their harps, crowds, and rotes. — Walter Scott, Ivanhoe
- 1684: That keep their consciences in cases,
As fiddlers do with crowds and bases — Samuel Butler, "Hudibras"