THAT


Meaning of THAT in English

I. ˈthat, thət pronoun

( plural those ˈthōz)

Etymology: Middle English, from Old English thæt, neuter demonstrative pronoun & definite article; akin to Old High German daz, neuter demonstrative pronoun & definite article, Greek to, Latin is tud, neuter demonstrative pronoun

Date: before 12th century

1.

a. : the person, thing, or idea indicated, mentioned, or understood from the situation

that is my father

b. : the time, action, or event specified

after that I went to bed

c. : the kind or thing specified as follows

the purest water is that produced by distillation

d. : one or a group of the indicated kind

that ' s a cat — quick and agile

2.

a. : the one farther away or less immediately under observation or discussion

those are maples and these are elms

b. : the former one

3.

a. — used as a function word after and to indicate emphatic repetition of the idea expressed by a previous word or phrase

he was helpful, and that to an unusual degree

b. — used as a function word immediately before or after a word group consisting of a verbal auxiliary or a form of the verb be preceded by there or a personal pronoun subject to indicate emphatic repetition of the idea expressed by a previous verb or predicate noun or predicate adjective

is she capable? She is that

4.

a. : the one : the thing : the kind : something , anything

the truth of that which is true

the senses are that whereby we experience the world

what's that you say

b. plural : some persons

those who think the time has come

- all that

- at that

II. thət, ˈthat conjunction

Date: before 12th century

1.

a.

(1) — used as a function word to introduce a noun clause that is usually the subject or object of a verb or a predicate nominative

said that he was afraid

(2) — used as a function word to introduce a subordinate clause that is anticipated by the expletive it occurring as subject of the verb

it is unlikely that he'll be in

(3) — used as a function word to introduce a subordinate clause that is joined as complement to a noun or adjective

we are certain that this is true

the fact that you are here

(4) — used as a function word to introduce a subordinate clause modifying an adverb or adverbial expression

will go anywhere that he is invited

b. — used as a function word to introduce an exclamatory clause expressing a strong emotion especially of surprise, sorrow, or indignation

that it should come to this!

2.

a.

(1) — used as a function word to introduce a subordinate clause expressing purpose or desired result

cutting down expenses that her son might inherit an unencumbered estate — W. B. Yeats

(2) — used as a function word to introduce a subordinate clause expressing a reason or cause

rejoice that you are lightened of a load — Robert Browning

(3) — used as a function word to introduce a subordinate clause expressing consequence, result, or effect

are of sufficient importance that they cannot be neglected — Hannah Wormington

b. — used as a function word to introduce an exclamatory clause expressing a wish

oh, that he would come

3. — used as a function word after a subordinating conjunction without modifying its meaning

if that thy bent of love be honorable — Shakespeare

III. adjective

( plural those )

Date: 12th century

1.

a. : being the person, thing, or idea specified, mentioned, or understood

b. : being the one specified — usually used for emphasis

that rarity among leaders

that brother of yours

c. : so great a : such

2. : the farther away or less immediately under observation or discussion

this chair or that one

IV. thət, ˈthat pronoun

Etymology: Middle English, from Old English thæt, neuter relative pronoun, from thæt, neuter demonstrative pronoun

Date: before 12th century

1. — used as a function word to introduce a restrictive relative clause and to serve as a substitute within that clause for the substantive modified by the clause

the house that Jack built

I'll make a ghost of him that lets me — Shakespeare

2.

a. : at which : in which : on which : by which : with which : to which

each year that the lectures are given

b. : according to what : to the extent of what — used after a negative

has never been here that I know of

3.

a. archaic : that which

b. obsolete : the person who

Usage:

That, which, who: In current usage that refers to persons or things, which chiefly to things and rarely to subhuman entities, who chiefly to persons and sometimes to animals. The notion that that should not be used to refer to persons is without foundation; such use is entirely standard. Because that has no genitive form or construction, of which or whose must be substituted for it in contexts that call for the genitive.

Usage:

That, which: Although some handbooks say otherwise, that and which are both regularly used to introduce restrictive clauses in edited prose. Which is also used to introduce nonrestrictive clauses. That was formerly used to introduce nonrestrictive clauses; such use is virtually nonexistent in present-day edited prose, though it may occasionally be found in poetry.

V. ˈthat adverb

Date: 13th century

1. : to such an extent

a nail about that long

2. : very , extremely — usually used with the negative

did not take the festival that seriously — Eric Goldman

Merriam-Webster's Collegiate English vocabulary.      Энциклопедический словарь английского языка Merriam Webster.