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Gasp   /gæsp/   Listen
noun
Gasp  n.  The act of opening the mouth convulsively to catch the breath; a labored respiration; a painful catching of the breath.
At the last gasp, at the point of death.



verb
Gasp  v. t.  To emit or utter with gasps; with forth, out, away, etc. "And with short sobs he gasps away his breath."



Gasp  v. i.  (past & past part. gasped; pres. part. gasping)  
1.
To open the mouth wide in catching the breath, or in laborious respiration; to labor for breath; to respire convulsively; to pant violently. "She gasps and struggles hard for life."
2.
To pant with eagerness; to show vehement desire. "Quenching the gasping furrows' thirst with rain."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Gasp" Quotes from Famous Books



... the wave was packed hardest, and he did not pause till he had passed the last drift and set his foot on the hard, gravelly slope. The wind was cooler now, for the night was well along and the bare ground had radiated its heat; but it was dry, powder dry, and every pore of his skin seemed to gasp and cry out for water. There was water, even yet, in the bottom of his canteen; but he dared not drink it till the Gateway was in sight, and the sand-wash that led to the ...
— Shadow Mountain • Dane Coolidge

... the reviewer affects to lose his respiration, and with "a gasp of incredulity" wants to know what the writer means, "and what standards he proposes to himself when he has given up the English ones?" The reviewer makes a more serious case than the writer intended, or than a fair construction of the context of his phrases warrants. It is the criticism of "a certain ...
— Baddeck and That Sort of Thing • Charles Dudley Warner

... grimness of it appealed to her sense of the ludicrous, and she felt inclined to scream or do something desperate just to see what would happen. At length the dreary repast came to an end, and she had just taken up a newspaper, with a sort of gasp of relief at the thought of escaping for a moment into a larger world, when she was recalled to the narrow circle of Greyshot by ...
— We Two • Edna Lyall

... declared they would hang from the battlements fifteen hundred Christian captives, male and female—that they would put all their old men, their women, and children into the citadel, set fire to the city, and sally forth, sword in hand, to fight until the last gasp. "In this way," said they, "the Spanish sovereigns shall gain a bloody victory, and the fall of Malaga be renowned ...
— Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada • Washington Irving

... out of the cabin, just in time to meet the head chief of the village coming out of another one. The two stared at each other, and then they saw the great figure, in its mystic apparel, just where forest and open met. Each uttered a gasp, and, before they could gasp a second time, the apparition was gone among the trees, vanishing from their stupefied gaze like a wisp of smoke before the wind. Then Red Eagle and his host, great and wise chiefs though they were, looked at ...
— The Eyes of the Woods - A story of the Ancient Wilderness • Joseph A. Altsheler


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