Strain definition

Strain





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6 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Strain \Strain\, n. [See {Strene}.]
     1. Race; stock; generation; descent; family.
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              He is of a noble strain.              --Shak.
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              With animals and plants a cross between different
              varieties, or between individuals of the same
              variety but of another strain, gives vigor and
              fertility to the offspring.           --Darwin.
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     2. Hereditary character, quality, or disposition.
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              Intemperance and lust breed diseases, which,
              propogated, spoil the strain of nation. --Tillotson.
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     3. Rank; a sort. "The common strain." --Dryden.
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     4. (Hort.) A cultural subvariety that is only slightly
        differentiated.
        [Webster 1913 Suppl.]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Strain \Strain\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Strained}; p. pr. & vb. n.
     {Straining}.] [OF. estraindre, estreindre, F. ['e]treindre,
     L. stringere to draw or bind tight; probably akin to Gr. ? a
     halter, ? that which is squeezwd out, a drop, or perhaps to
     E. strike. Cf. {Strangle}, {Strike}, {Constrain}, {District},
     {Strait}, a. {Stress}, {Strict}, {Stringent}.]
     1. To draw with force; to extend with great effort; to
        stretch; as, to strain a rope; to strain the shrouds of a
        ship; to strain the cords of a musical instrument. "To
        strain his fetters with a stricter care." --Dryden.
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     2. (Mech.) To act upon, in any way, so as to cause change of
        form or volume, as forces on a beam to bend it.
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     3. To exert to the utmost; to ply vigorously.
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              He sweats,
              Strains his young nerves.             --Shak.
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              They strain their warbling throats
              To welcome in the spring.             --Dryden.
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     4. To stretch beyond its proper limit; to do violence to, in
        the matter of intent or meaning; as, to strain the law in
        order to convict an accused person.
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              There can be no other meaning in this expression,
              however some may pretend to strain it. --Swift.
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     5. To injure by drawing, stretching, or the exertion of
        force; as, the gale strained the timbers of the ship.
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     6. To injure in the muscles or joints by causing to make too
        strong an effort; to harm by overexertion; to sprain; as,
        to strain a horse by overloading; to strain the wrist; to
        strain a muscle.
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              Prudes decayed about may track,
              Strain their necks with looking back. --Swift.
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     7. To squeeze; to press closely.
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              Evander with a close embrace
              Strained his departing friend.        --Dryden.
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     8. To make uneasy or unnatural; to produce with apparent
        effort; to force; to constrain.
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              He talks and plays with Fatima, but his mirth
              Is forced and strained.               --Denham.
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              The quality of mercy is not strained. --Shak.
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     9. To urge with importunity; to press; as, to strain a
        petition or invitation.
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              Note, if your lady strain his entertainment. --Shak.
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     10. To press, or cause to pass, through a strainer, as
         through a screen, a cloth, or some porous substance; to
         purify, or separate from extraneous or solid matter, by
         filtration; to filter; as, to strain milk through cloth.
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     {To strain a point}, to make a special effort; especially, to
        do a degree of violence to some principle or to one's own
        feelings.
  
     {To strain courtesy}, to go beyond what courtesy requires; to
        insist somewhat too much upon the precedence of others; --
        often used ironically. --Shak.
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From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Strain \Strain\ (str[=a]n), v. i.
     1. To make violent efforts. "Straining with too weak a wing."
        --Pope.
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              To build his fortune I will strain a little. --Shak.
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     2. To percolate; to be filtered; as, water straining through
        a sandy soil.
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From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Strain \Strain\, n.
     1. The act of straining, or the state of being strained.
        Specifically: 
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        (a) A violent effort; an excessive and hurtful exertion or
            tension, as of the muscles; as, he lifted the weight
            with a strain; the strain upon a ship's rigging in a
            gale; also, the hurt or injury resulting; a sprain.
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                  Whether any poet of our country since
                  Shakespeare has exerted a greater variety of
                  powers with less strain and less ostentation.
                                                    --Landor.
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                  Credit is gained by custom, and seldom recovers
                  a strain.                         --Sir W.
                                                    Temple.
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        (b) (Mech. Physics) A change of form or dimensions of a
            solid or liquid mass, produced by a stress. --Rankine.
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     2. (Mus.) A portion of music divided off by a double bar; a
        complete musical period or sentence; a movement, or any
        rounded subdivision of a movement.
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              Their heavenly harps a lower strain began. --Dryden.
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     3. Any sustained note or movement; a song; a distinct portion
        of an ode or other poem; also, the pervading note, or
        burden, of a song, poem, oration, book, etc.; theme;
        motive; manner; style; also, a course of action or
        conduct; as, he spoke in a noble strain; there was a
        strain of woe in his story; a strain of trickery appears
        in his career. "A strain of gallantry." --Sir W. Scott.
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              Such take too high a strain at first. --Bacon.
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              The genius and strain of the book of Proverbs.
                                                    --Tillotson.
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              It [Pilgrim's Progress] seems a novelty, and yet
              contains
              Nothing but sound and honest gospel strains.
                                                    --Bunyan.
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     4. Turn; tendency; inborn disposition. Cf. 1st {Strain}.
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              Because heretics have a strain of madness, he
              applied her with some corporal chastisements.
                                                    --Hayward.
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From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

  strain
       n 1: (physics) deformation of a physical body under the action of
            applied forces
       2: difficulty that causes worry or emotional tension; "she
          endured the stresses and strains of life"; "he presided
          over the economy during the period of the greatest stress
          and danger"- R.J.Samuelson [syn: {stress}]
       3: a succession of notes forming a distinctive sequence; "she
          was humming an air from Beethoven" [syn: {tune}, {melody},
           {air}, {melodic line}, {line}, {melodic phrase}]
       4: (psychology) nervousness resulting from mental stress; "his
          responsibilities were a constant strain"; "the mental
          strain of staying alert hour after hour was too much for
          him" [syn: {mental strain}, {nervous strain}]
       5: a special variety of domesticated animals within a species;
          "he experimented on a particular breed of white rats"; "he
          created a new strain of sheep" [syn: {breed}, {stock}]
       6: (biology) a group of organisms within a species that differ
          in trivial ways from similar groups; "a new strain of
          microorganisms" [syn: {form}, {variant}, {var.}]
       7: a lineage or race of people [syn: {breed}]
       8: injury to a muscle (often caused by overuse); results in
          swelling and pain
       9: pervading note of an utterance; "I could follow the general
          tenor of his argument" [syn: {tenor}]
       10: an effortful attempt to attain a goal [syn: {striving}, {nisus},
            {pains}]
       11: an intense or violent exertion [syn: {straining}]
       12: the act of singing; "with a shout and a song they marched up
           to the gates" [syn: {song}]
       v 1: to exert much effort or energy; "straining our ears to hear"
            [syn: {strive}, {reach}]
       2: test the limits of; "You are trying my patience!" [syn: {try},
           {stress}]
       3: use to the utmost; exert vigorously or to full capacity; "He
          really extended himself when he climbed Kilimanjaro";
          "Don't strain your mind too much" [syn: {extend}]
       4: separate by passing through a sieve or other straining
          device to separate out coarser elements; "sift the flour"
          [syn: {sift}, {sieve}]
       5: make tense and uneasy or nervous or anxious; [syn: {tense},
          {tense up}] [ant: {relax}, {relax}]
       6: stretch or force to the limit; "strain the rope" [syn: {tense}]
       7: remove by passing through a filter; "filter out the
          impurities" [syn: {filter}, {filtrate}, {separate out}, {filter
          out}]
       8: rub through a strainer or process in an electric blender;
          "puree the vegetables for the baby" [syn: {puree}]
       9: alter the shape of (something) by stress; "His body was
          deformed by leprosy" [syn: {deform}, {distort}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 [moby-thes]:

  671 Moby Thesaurus words for "strain":
     Spenserian stanza, abrade, affectation, affiliation, agitation,
     aim, air, all-overs, anacrusis, ancestry, angst, animal kingdom,
     animus, antistrophe, anxiety, anxiety hysteria, anxiety neurosis,
     anxious bench, anxious concern, anxious seat, anxiousness,
     apparentation, apprehension, apprehensiveness, aptitude, aria,
     back down, balance, balk, bark, bass passage, be determined, belie,
     bent, bias, bid for, birth, bleed, blemish, blench, bloat,
     bloating, blood, bloodline, bloody, boggle, bolt, book, bourdon,
     bracket, brain fag, branch, brand, break, breaking point, breed,
     bridge, brood, burden, burn, cadence, camouflage,
     cankerworm of care, canto, cantus, care, cast, caste, category,
     chafe, character, check, chill, chilliness, chip, chorus, clan,
     clarify, class, claw, clear, coda, coldness, color,
     command of language, common ancestry, community, complexion,
     concern, concernment, consanguinity, constitution, contend for,
     continue, coolness, couplet, crack, crane, craze, culture, cut,
     damage, debate, debilitation, debility, decrassify, deliberate,
     demand, deme, demur, denomination, depurate, derivation, descant,
     descendants, descent, description, designation, determination,
     development, diathesis, direct line, disaffinity, discharge,
     disguise, disposition, disquiet, disquietude, distaff side,
     distension, distich, distill, distort, distress, disturbance,
     division, draft, drag, drag out, drain, draw, draw off, draw out,
     dread, dress up, drift, drive, eccentricity, edulcorate, effort,
     effuse, elongate, elongation, elute, embellish, embroider, emit,
     endeavor, enervation, enfeeblement, enmity, envoi, epode,
     essentialize, estate, ethnic group, evidence, exaggeration, exceed,
     excrete, exertion, exfiltrate, exposition, expression of ideas,
     extend, extension, extract, extraction, extravasate,
     extreme tension, exudate, exude, eyestrain, faintness, falsify,
     falter, family, fashion, fatigue, fear, feather, feeling for words,
     female line, fight shy of, figure, filiation, filter, filtrate,
     flinch, folderol, folk, force, foreboding, forebodingness, form,
     form of speech, fracture, fray, frazzle, fret, frost, fudge, gag,
     gall, garble, gash, genre, gens, genus, gild, give off, gloss,
     gloss over, goneness, grace of expression, grade, grain,
     grandiloquence, group, grouping, hang back, hang off, harass, harm,
     harmonic close, haul, have qualms, head, heading, heart strain,
     heave, hem and haw, heptastich, heritage, hesitate, hexastich,
     hint, hold off, house, hover, hum and haw, humor, hurt, iciness,
     idiosyncrasy, ilk, impair, impression, incise, inclination,
     incompatibility, incompatibleness, indication, individualism,
     inflate, inflation, inhospitality, inimicality, injure, injury,
     inquietude, interlude, intermezzo, introductory phrase, irk,
     jadedness, jib, kidney, kin, kind, label, labor, lacerate, languor,
     lassitude, lay, leach, leaning, lengthen, lengthen out,
     lengthening, let out, level, line, line of descent, lineage,
     literary style, lixiviate, lot, lug, maim, make, make an effort,
     make bones about, make mincemeat of, makeup, malaise, male line,
     manner, manner of speaking, mannerism, mark, mask, matriclan, maul,
     measure, melodia, melodic line, melody, mental fatigue, mental set,
     mental strain, mettle, mind, mind-set, miscite, miscolor,
     misconstrue, misdirect, misgiving, misinterpret, misquote,
     misrender, misreport, misrepresent, misstate, misuse, mode,
     mode of expression, moil, mold, monostich, mood, movement, music,
     musical phrase, musical sentence, mutilate, nation, nationality,
     nature, nervous strain, nervous tension, nervousness, note, number,
     obligation, octastich, octave, octet, ooze, order, ornament,
     ottava rima, overanxiety, overburden, overcarrying, overdevelop,
     overdistend, overdistension, overdoing, overdraw, overdrawing,
     overemphasis, overexercise, overexert, overexertion, overexpand,
     overexpansion, overexpenditure, overextend, overextension,
     overimportance, overreaching, overreaction, overstate, overstrain,
     overstraining, overstress, overstretch, overstretching, overtax,
     overtaxing, overtiredness, overuse, overwork, pain, parentage,
     part, passage, patriclan, pause, peculiarity, pedigree, pentastich,
     people, percolate, period, personal conflict, personal style,
     persuasion, perturbation, pervert, phrase, phratry, phylum, pierce,
     pigeonhole, pins and needles, plant kingdom, ponder, position,
     predicament, predilection, predisposition, preference, press,
     pressure, proclivity, produce, production, prolong, prolongate,
     prolongation, propensity, protract, protraction, pucker, pull,
     pull back, pull for, puncture, purify, push, quail, quality,
     quatrain, race, rack, rank, rating, recoil, rectify, reek, refine,
     refrain, rend, resolution, resolve, response, retreat, rhetoric,
     rhyme royal, rip, ritornello, roots, rubric, run, rupture, savage,
     scald, scorch, scotch, scrape, scratch, screen, scruple, scuff,
     section, seed, seek, seep, sense of language, separate, sept,
     septet, sestet, set, sew, sextet, shape, shilly-shally, shrink,
     shy, shy at, side, sieve, sift, sign, skin, slant, slash,
     sleepiness, slit, snapping point, society, solicitude, solo,
     solo part, song, soprano part, sort, sound, soupcon, spear side,
     species, speech community, spin out, spindle side, spirit,
     spiritualize, sprain, stab, stamp, stance fatigue, stanza,
     statement, station, status, stave, stem, stew, stick, stick at,
     stickle, stirps, stock, stop to consider, straddle the fence,
     strain at, strain every nerve, strain for, straining, strains,
     stratum, streak, stress, stress and strain, stressfulness, stretch,
     stretch out, stretching, string out, stringing out, stripe, strive,
     strive for, striving, strophe, struggle, struggle for, study,
     stumble, style, stylistic analysis, stylistics, subdivision,
     subgroup, sublimate, sublime, suborder, succession, suggestion,
     supererogation, surpass, suspense, suspicion, sweat, sweat blood,
     swell, swelling, sword side, syllable, tailpiece, tauten, tautness,
     tax, taxing, tear, temper, temperament, tendency, tenor, tense,
     tenseness, tension, tercet, terza rima, tetrastich,
     the grand style, the like of, the likes of, the plain style,
     the sublime, theme, think twice about, thread, tighten, tiredness,
     titivate, title, toil, tone, torture, totem, trace, trait,
     transpire, transude, traumatize, treble, tribe, trick, trick out,
     triplet, tristich, trouble, try, try for, try hard, tug, tune,
     turn, turn of mind, tutti, tutti passage, twist, type,
     unamiability, uncordiality, understate, uneasiness, unfriendliness,
     ungeniality, unquietness, unsociability, upset, variation, variety,
     varnish, vein, verse, vestige, vexation, warp, waver, way,
     weakness, wearifulness, weariness, weep, whitewash, wince, winnow,
     withdraw, work, worry, wound, wrench, yield, zeal
  
  

















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