GAPE


Meaning of GAPE in English

I. ˈgāp sometimes ˈgap or ˈgaa(ə)p verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English gapen, from Old Norse gapa; akin to Old English ofer gapian to neglect, Middle Dutch gapen to gape, Middle High German gaffen to stare with open mouth, Old High German geffida observation, Latin hiare to gape, yawn — more at yawn

intransitive verb

1.

a. : to open the mouth wide especially with intent to bite or swallow

baby birds gape until they are fed

b. : to open like a mouth : spread apart along an edge or make a cavity

the shell of a clam gapes

holes gape in pavements after floods

2.

a. : to stare openmouthed in surprise or admiration — usually used with at

the men gaped at me in utter amazement — R.H.Davis

gapes round-eyed at the astonishing world — Rose Macaulay

b. : to stare with the mouth open vacantly as if not comprehending

gaped vaguely at the skylight — Dorothy Sayers

depicts man lost and blindly gaping amidst the chaos — Rhys Gwyn

3. archaic

a. : to yearn especially for something of questionable value — usually used with after or for

gape after new spiritual incarnations — J.C.Hare

b. : to want earnestly to do something : crave — used with infinitive

gaping with mouths wide open to have their curiosity satisfied — Sporting Magazine

4. : to draw a deep involuntary breath with the mouth open especially as a result of fatigue or boredom : yawn

a dull lecture makes the students gape

5. archaic : shout , bellow

you'll leave your noise anon … ye rude slaves leave your gaping — Shakespeare

transitive verb

: to make an opening in

a fearful battlefield, the earth of it gaped open by shells and bombs — Ira Wolfert

Synonyms: see gaze

II. noun

( -s )

1. : an act of gaping:

a. : yawn

b. : an openmouthed stare

c. archaic : an eager search after : quest

a perpetual gape after knowledge — Joseph Addison

2. : an unfilled space or extent : vacuum

the huge attentive gape of emptiness — Thomas Wolfe

3.

a. : the median margin-to-margin length of the open mouth

b. : the line along which the mandibles of a bird close

c. : an opening at the edge of a mollusk shell when the valves are shut

d. : the width of an opening that resembles a mouth

gyratory crushers having a gape suitable for the coarsest crushing — A.M.Gaudin

e. : the distance between the barb and shank on a fishhook

4. gapes plural but singular in construction

a. : a disease of young chickens, turkeys, and other birds in which nematode worms ( Syngamus trachea ) invade and irritate the trachea causing coughing and labored breathing often with the neck extended and the beak open

gapes is a common disease of chicks aged three to eight weeks — W.P.Blount

— see gapeworm

b. : a fit of yawning — used with the

as the lecture dragged on, he got the gapes

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.