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Found 5 hits - Term: catching, Database: *, Strategy: exact
[1] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
catch \catch\, v. t. imp.  p. p. caughtor catched; p. pr.
    vb. n. catching. catched is rarely used. oe. cacchen,
   of. cachier, dialectic form of chacier to hunt, f. chasser,
   fr. assumend ll. captiare, for l. capture, v. intens. of
   capere to take, catch. see capacious, and cf. chase,
   case a box.
   1913 webster
   1. to lay hold on; to seize, especially with the hand; to
      grasp anything in motion, with the effect of holding;
      as, to catch a ball.
      1913 webster

   2. to seize after pursuing; to arrest; as, to catch a thief.
      "they pursued . . . and caught him." --judg. i. 6.
      1913 webster

   3. to take captive, as in a snare or net, or on a hook; as,
      to catch a bird or fish.
      1913 webster

   4. hence: to insnare; to entangle. "to catch him in his
      words". --mark xii. 13.
      1913 webster

   5. to seize with the senses or the mind; to apprehend; as, to
      catch a melody. "fiery thoughts . . . whereof i catch the
      issue." --tennyson.
      1913 webster

   6. to communicate to; to fasten upon; as, the fire caught the
      adjoining building.
      1913 webster

   7. to engage and attach; to please; to charm.
      1913 webster

            the soothing arts that catch the fair. --dryden.
      1913 webster

   8. to get possession of; to attain.
      1913 webster

            torment myself to catch the english throne. --shak.
      1913 webster

   9. to take or receive; esp. to take by sympathy, contagion,
      infection, or exposure; as, to catch the spirit of an
      occasion; to catch the measles or smallpox; to catch cold;
      the house caught fire.
      1913 webster

   10. to come upon unexpectedly or by surprise; to find; as, to
       catch one in the act of stealing.
       1913 webster

   11. to reach in time; to come up with; as, to catch a train.
       1913 webster

   to catch fire, to become inflamed or ignited.

   to catch it to get a scolding or beating; to suffer
      punishment. colloq.

   to catch one's eye, to interrupt captiously while speaking.
      colloq. "you catch me up so very short." --dickens.

   to catch up, to snatch; to take up suddenly.
      1913 webster
see also:
caught catched catching capacious chase case 
to catch fire to catch it to catch one's eye to catch up 
[2] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
catching \catch"ing\ a.
   1. infectious; contagious.
      1913 webster

   2. captivating; alluring.
      1913 webster

[3] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
catching \catch"ing\, n.
   the act of seizing or taking hold of.
   1913 webster

   catching bargain law, a bargain made with an heir
      expectant for the purchase of his expectancy at an
      inadequate price. --bouvier.
      1913 webster
see also:
catching bargain 
[4] : WordNet (r) 2.0
catching
     adj : of disease capable of being transmitted by infection syn:
            communicable, contagious, contractable, transmissible,
            transmittable
     n 1: baseball playing the position of catcher on a baseball
          team
     2: the act of detecting something; catching sight of something
        syn: detection, espial, spying, spotting
     3: becoming infected; "catching cold is sometimes unavoidable";
        "the contracting of a serious illness can be financially
        catastrophic" syn: contracting
see also:
communicable contagious contractable transmissible transmittable detection 
espial spying spotting contracting 
[5] : Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
97 moby thesaurus words for "catching":
   alluring, annexational, appealing, appetizing, attractive,
   beguiling, bewitching, blandishing, cajoling, captivating,
   charismatic, charming, coaxing, come-hither, communicable,
   confiscatory, contagious, coquettish, deadly, deprivative,
   destructive, enchanting, endemic, engaging, enravishing,
   enthralling, enticing, entrancing, envenomed, epidemial, epidemic,
   epiphytotic, epizootic, exciting, exotic, expropriatory,
   fascinating, fetching, flirtatious, glamorous, hypnotic,
   infectious, infective, inoculable, interesting, intriguing,
   inviting, irresistible, malign, malignant, mephitic, mesmeric,
   miasmal, miasmatic, miasmic, mouth-watering, noxious, pandemic,
   pestiferous, pestilential, piquant, poisonous, prepossessing,
   privative, provocative, provoquant, ravishing, seducing, seductive,
   siren, sirenic, spellbinding, spellful, sporadic, spreading,
   taking, tantalizing, teasing, tempting, thievish, tickling,
   titillating, titillative, toxic, toxicant, toxiferous,
   transmissible, transmittable, venenate, veneniferous, venenous,
   venomous, virulent, winning, winsome, witching, zymotic





Results 1 - 1 of 1 found about catching:

Catching >> C Words
Catching, definition of term: Catching
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