thaw
Meanings
verb
- To gradually cause (something frozen, such as earth, ice, or snow) to melt or soften by raising the temperature.
- To gradually cause (someone or something that is very cold) to warm up.
- To cause (something inactive) to become active; also, to cause (something unfeeling) to have feelings.
- To cause (someone or their feelings that are reserved or unfriendly) to become friendly or gentle.
- To cause (something rigid) to become limp.
- Of something frozen, such as earth, ice, or snow: to gradually melt or soften as a result of the temperature being raised.
- Of someone or something that is very cold: to gradually warm up.
- With the dummy pronoun it: of the weather: to become sufficiently warm for ice, snow, etc., to melt.
- Of a person or their feelings that are reserved or unfriendly: to become friendly or gentle.
- Of something inactive: to become active; also, of something unfeeling: to develop feelings.
noun
- A gradual melting or softening of something frozen (such as earth, ice, or snow) when the temperature rises; the transformation of something frozen into a fluid or semifluid.
- A gradual warming up of someone or something that is very cold.
- Of something inactive: an act of becoming active; also, of something unfeeling: an act of developing feelings.
- Of a person who is reserved or unfriendly: an act of becoming friendly or gentle.
- A period of relaxation of restrictions in a country or state; also, a period of increased friendliness or understanding, or of reduced hostility or tension in relations, between states.
- A period of weather warm enough to melt ice, snow, etc.
name
- A river in South Wales which flows into the Bristol Channel at Aberthaw.
name
- A surname from Burmese.
Pronunciation
Word forms
Etymology
The verb is derived from Middle English thawen, thowen (“to melt (ice, snow, etc.), thaw”), from Old English þāwian, *þāwan (“to thaw”), from Proto-West Germanic *þauwjan (“to melt, thaw; to digest; to dissolve”), from Proto-Germanic *þawjaną (“to thaw”), from Proto-Indo-European *teh₂- (“to melt; to flow, stream”). The noun is derived from Late Middle English thawe, thowe (“melting of ice, snow, etc., thawing”), from thawen, thowen (verb) (see above). cognates * Dutch dooien (“to thaw”) * German tauen (“to thaw”) * German Low German deien (“to thaw”) * Icelandic þeyja (“to thaw”) * Saterland Frisian daie, dauje (“to thaw”) * Swedish töa (“to thaw”) * West Frisian teie (“to thaw”)
Synonyms
Related words
Derived words
Translations
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