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Gray   /greɪ/   Listen
Gray

noun
1.
A neutral achromatic color midway between white and black.  Synonyms: grayness, grey, greyness.
2.
Clothing that is a grey color.  Synonym: grey.
3.
Any organization or party whose uniforms or badges are grey.  Synonym: grey.
4.
Horse of a light gray or whitish color.  Synonym: grey.
5.
The SI unit of energy absorbed from ionizing radiation; equal to the absorption of one joule of radiation energy by one kilogram of matter; one gray equals 100 rad.  Synonym: Gy.
6.
English radiobiologist in whose honor the gray (the SI unit of energy for the absorbed dose of radiation) was named (1905-1965).  Synonym: Louis Harold Gray.
7.
English poet best known for his elegy written in a country churchyard (1716-1771).  Synonym: Thomas Gray.
8.
American navigator who twice circumnavigated the globe and who discovered the Columbia River (1755-1806).  Synonym: Robert Gray.
9.
United States botanist who specialized in North American flora and who was an early supporter of Darwin's theories of evolution (1810-1888).  Synonym: Asa Gray.
adjective
(compar. grayer; superl. grayest)  (Written also grey)
1.
Of an achromatic color of any lightness intermediate between the extremes of white and black.  Synonyms: grayish, grey, greyish.  "Gray flannel suit" , "A man with greyish hair"
2.
Showing characteristics of age, especially having grey or white hair.  Synonyms: gray-haired, gray-headed, grey, grey-haired, grey-headed, grizzly, hoar, hoary, white-haired.  "Nodded his hoary head"
3.
Used to signify the Confederate forces in the American Civil War (who wore grey uniforms).  Synonym: grey.
4.
Intermediate in character or position.  Synonym: grey.
verb
1.
Make grey.  Synonym: grey.
2.
Turn grey.  Synonym: grey.



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"Gray" Quotes from Famous Books



... Teutonic philosopher in the English biographies of him: "The stature of his outward body was almost of no Personage; his person was little and leane, with browes somewhat inbowed; high Temples, somewhat hauk-nosed: His eyes were gray and somewhat heaven blew, and otherwise as the Windows in Solomon's Temple: He had a thin Beard; a small low Voyce. His Speech was lovely. He was modest in his Behaviour, humble in his conversation and meeke in his heart. His spirit was highly enlightened by God, ...
— Spiritual Reformers in the 16th & 17th Centuries • Rufus M. Jones

... nuns, the Boarding-school, where the scholars were lodged; and lastly, what was called the Little Convent. It was a building with a garden, in which lived all sorts of aged nuns of various orders, the relics of cloisters destroyed in the Revolution; a reunion of all the black, gray, and white medleys of all communities and all possible varieties; what might be called, if such a coupling of words is permissible, ...
— Les Miserables - Complete in Five Volumes • Victor Hugo

... heat and dry, thirsty sand, miles upon miles of it flashing by in a gray, barren blur. A flat, arid, monotonous land, vast, threatening, waterless, treeless. Its immensity awed, its bleakness depressed. Man's work here seemed but to accentuate the puny insignificance of man. Man had come upon the desert and had gone, leaving only a line of telegraph-poles with ...
— Under Handicap - A Novel • Jackson Gregory

... been absent from the saloon the night before straggled into camp, with jaded mules and new attire. Carondelet Joe came in, clad in a pair of pants, on which slender saffron-hued serpents ascended graceful gray Corinthian columns, while from under the collar of a new white shirt appeared a cravat, displaying most of the ...
— Romance of California Life • John Habberton

... were so in the traitor's favor, that the king had to have him out and cut off his head in the gray of the morning, ere folks were up and about; that the fellow was so holy that he past all his time in prison in weeping and praying, and said over the whole Psalter every day, because his mother had taught it him,—I wish she had taught him to be an honest man;—and that when his head was ...
— Hereward, The Last of the English • Charles Kingsley


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