RAPT


Meaning of RAPT in English

I. ˈrapt adjective

Etymology: Middle English, from Latin raptus, past participle of rapere to seize, rob, kidnap, ravish — more at rapid

1. : lifted (as by supernatural force) and carried up or away : transported in spirit or to another place

rapt into future times, the bard began — Alexander Pope

2. : transported with emotion (as love, delight) : enraptured

the rapt exaltation of the devotee — J.A.Symonds

3. : wholly absorbed or engrossed (as in feeling, meditation, or special interests)

rapt in secret studies — Shakespeare

4. obsolete : abducted, raped

• rapt·ly adverb

• rapt·ness noun -es

II. noun

( -s )

Etymology: Latin raptus action of seizing, robbing, kidnapping, or ravishing, from raptus, past participle of rapere

: a violent or sudden transporting ; also : an ecstatic state : rapture

III. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Latin raptus, past participle

obsolete : to carry away by force : transport , ravish

IV.

past of rap

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