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⇱ grasping - WordReference.com Dictionary of English


grasping

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UK:**UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/ˈgrɑːspɪŋ/US:USA pronunciation: IPA and respellingUSA pronunciation: IPA/ˈgræspɪŋ/ ,USA pronunciation: respelling(grasping, gräs-)


WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
grasp•ing /ˈgræspɪŋ/USA pronunciation   adj. 
  1. greedy;
    grabbing;
    avaricious.

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
grasp•ing  (grasping, gräs-),USA pronunciation adj. 
  1. greedy;
    avaricious:a sly, grasping man.
  2. being used to grasp or tending to grasp;
    tenacious.
  • grasp + -ing2 1540–50
grasping•ly, adv. 
grasping•ness, n. 
    1. . covetous, selfish, acquisitive, venal.

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
grasping /ˈɡrɑːspɪŋ/ adj
  1. greedy; avaricious; rapacious
ˈgraspingly adv
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
grasp /græsp/USA pronunciation   v. 
  1. to seize and hold by or as if by clasping with the fingers or arms:[+ object]She grasped my arm and pulled me aside.
  2. to attempt seizing:[+ for/at + object]The baby grasped at the bottle.
  3. to comprehend;
    understand:[+ object]I grasp your meaning.

n. [countable* usually singular]
  1. the act of grasping.
  2. reach;
    attainment;
    control:[within one's + ~]The new promotion was within his grasp.
  3. power to understand:has a good grasp of math.
grasp•a•ble, adj. 

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
grasp  (grasp, gräsp),USA pronunciation v.t. 
  1. to seize and hold by or as if by clasping with the fingers or arms.
  2. to seize upon;
    hold firmly.
  3. to get hold of mentally;
    comprehend;
    understand:I don't grasp your meaning.

v.i. 
  1. to make an attempt to seize, or a motion of seizing, something (usually fol. by at or for):a drowning man grasping at straws; to grasp for an enemy's rifle.

n. 
  1. the act of grasping or gripping, as with the hands or arms:to make a grasp at something.
  2. a hold or grip:to have a firm grasp of a rope.
  3. one's arms or hands, in embracing or gripping:He took her in his grasp.
  4. one's power of seizing and holding;
    reach:to have a thing within one's grasp.
  5. hold, possession, or mastery:to wrest power from the grasp of a usurper.
  6. mental hold or capacity;
    power to understand.
  7. broad or thorough comprehension:a good grasp of computer programming.
  • 1350–1400; Middle English graspen, grapsen; cognate with Low German grapsen; akin to Old English gegræppian to seize (see grapple)
graspa•ble, adj. 
grasper, n. 
graspless, adj. 
    1. grip, clutch; grab. See catch. 9. clutches. 10. scope, comprehension. Grasp, reach refer to the power of seizing, either concretely or figuratively. Grasp suggests actually seizing and closing the hand upon something (or, figuratively, thoroughly comprehending something) and therefore refers to what is within one's possession or immediate possibility of possession:a good grasp of a problem; immense mental grasp.Reach suggests a stretching out of (usually) the hand to touch, strike, or, if possible, seize something; it therefore refers to a potentiality of possession that requires an effort. Figuratively, it implies perhaps a faint conception of something still too far beyond one to be definitely and clearly understood.
    1. release.

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
grasp /ɡrɑːsp/ vb
  1. to grip (something) firmly with or as if with the hands
  2. when intr, often followed by at: to struggle, snatch, or grope (for)
  3. (transitive) to understand, esp with effort
n
  1. the act of grasping
  2. a grip or clasp, as of a hand
  3. total rule or possession
  4. understanding; comprehension
Etymology: 14th Century: from Low German grapsen; related to Old English græppian to seize, Old Norse grāpa to stealˈgraspable adj ˈgrasper n
'grasping' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):

🗣️Forum discussions with the word(s) "grasping" in the title:

an affinity which makes itself known after his death in the grasping...
as a means of grasping one’s place in the present
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done by 'grasping' with the palm of the hand
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it is the act of grasping, not the thing grasped
Outstretched hand/ Arthritic grasping claw
philosophy: grasping its own time in thought
she was grasping in nature
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without fully grasping the nature not the subject to…

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