head

head
I
n.
upper part of the body

1) to nod; shake one's head

2) to bare; bow; drop, hang, lower; lift, raise; move; poke, stick; scratch; toss; turn one's head (to scratch one's head in amazement; to poke one's head around the comer)

3) to hold one's head high ('to be proud')

4) from head to foot

length of a horse's head

5) by a head (our horse won by a head)

poise

6) to lose one's head

7) a cool, level head (to keep a level head)

person

8) to count heads

brain

9) to use one's head

10) to cram, fill, stuff smb.'s head (with nonsense)

11) a clear head

12) to have a head for (figures)

climax

13) to bring smt. to a head

14) to come to a head (the boil came to a head; when will the crisis come to a head?)

front part

15) at the head (of a column)

leader

16) a titular head

chairperson

(esp. BE)

17) a department head, a head of (the) department (AE usu. has chairman, chairperson)

misc.

18) a thick head of hair; success went to his head ('his success made him conceited'); head over heels ('completely'); heads up ('watch out'); to get smt. through one's head ('to finally comprehend smt.'); to hang one's head in shame ('to be greatly embarrassed'); to be head and shoulders above smb. ('to be greatly superior to smb.'); to keep one's head above water ('to survive barely'); over one's head ('incomprehensible'); out of one's head ('delirious'); to make head or tail of ('to comprehend'); to put heads together ('to collaborate'); prejudice reared its ugly head ('prejudice appeared'); he took it into his head to leave ('he decided suddenly to leave')

II
v.

1) (d; intr.) ('to go') to head for (to head for the city; to head for a downfall)

2) (P; intr., tr.) they headed (their boat) east

* * *
[hed]
shake one's head
head over heels ('completely')
out of one's head ('delirious')
he took it into his head to leave ('he decided suddenly to leave')
success went to his head ('his success made him conceited')
over one's head ('incomprehensible')
prejudice reared its ugly head ('prejudice appeared')
to hang one's head in shame ('to be greatly embarrassed')
to be head and shoulders above smb. ('to be greatly superior to smb. ')
to put heads together ('to collaborate')
to make head or tail of ('to comprehend')
to get smt. through One's head ('to finally comprehend smt. ')
to keep one's head above water ('to survive barely')
heads up ('watch out')
a head of (the) department (AE usu. has chairman, chairperson)
level head (to keep a level head)
turn one's head (to scratch one's head in amazement; to poke one's head around the comer)
stuff smb. 's head (with nonsense)
(P; intr., tr.) they headed (their boat) east
['brain'] to use one's head
['chairperson'] (esp. BE) a department head
['climax'] to bring smt. to a head
['leader'] a titular head
['misc. '] a thick head of hair
['person'] to count heads
['poise'] to lose one's head
['upper part of the body'] to nod
a clear head
a cool
from head to foot
to bare
to cram
to hold one's head high ('to be proud')
to have a head for (figures)
['front part'] at the head (of a column)
['length of a horse's head'] by a head (our horse won by a head)
to come to a head (the boil came to a head; when will the crisis come to a head?)
(d; intr.) ('to go') to head for (to head for the city; to head for a downfall)

Combinatory dictionary. 2013.

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  • Head — (h[e^]d), n. [OE. hed, heved, heaved, AS. he[ a]fod; akin to D. hoofd, OHG. houbit, G. haupt, Icel. h[ o]fu[eth], Sw. hufvud, Dan. hoved, Goth. haubi[thorn]. The word does not correspond regularly to L. caput head (cf. E. {Chief}, {Cadet},… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • head — [hed] n. [ME hede, heved < OE heafod, akin to Ger haupt (OHG houbit, Goth haubith) < IE base * kaput (orig. prob. cup shaped) > L caput: merged in Gmc with word akin to OHG hūba, a cap, crest (Ger haube) < IE base * keu , to bend,… …   English World dictionary

  • head — ► NOUN 1) the upper part of the human body, or the front or upper part of the body of an animal, containing the brain, mouth, and sense organs. 2) a person in charge; a director or leader. 3) the front, forward, or upper part or end of something …   English terms dictionary

  • Head — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Anthony Head (* 1954), englischer Schauspieler Antony Head, 1. Viscount Head (1906–1983), britischer Brigadegeneral der British Army sowie Politiker der Conservative Party Barclay V. Head (1844–1914),… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Head — (h[e^]d), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Headed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Heading}.] 1. To be at the head of; to put one s self at the head of; to lead; to direct; to act as leader to; as, to head an army, an expedition, or a riot. Dryden. [1913 Webster] 2. To… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Head On — may refer to: * Head on collision, a type of vehicular collision. * Head On (album), a 1975 album by Bachman Turner Overdrive * Head On , a song originally recorded by The Jesus and Mary Chain and covered by the Pixies * Head On Memories of the… …   Wikipedia

  • head-on — adv 1.) crash/collide/smash etc head on if two vehicles crash etc head on, the front part of one vehicle hits the front part of the other 2.) if someone deals with a problem head on, they do not try to avoid it, but deal with it in a direct and… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • head-on — adj. 1. characterized by direct opposition; as, a head on confrontation. Syn: head to head. [WordNet 1.5] 2. Without evasion or compromise; as, his usual head on fashion; to meet a problem head on. Syn: downright, flat footed, forthright,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • head — [adj] most important; chief arch, champion, first, foremost, front, highest, leading, main, pioneer, preeminent, premier, prime, principal, stellar, supreme, topmost; concepts 568,574 Ant. auxiliary, inferior, lower, second, secondary, trivial,… …   New thesaurus

  • Head On — Entwickler Sega/Gremlin Publisher …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • head-on — head on1 or ,head on adverb 1. ) if two vehicles crash head on, the front of one vehicle hits the front of the other 2. ) if you deal with a problem head on, you deal with it in a very direct way head on ,head on 2 adjective a head on crash is… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

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