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A Writer's Dictionary:

drove Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with D » driving seat ... drugging » drove


drive
verb drove (past tense), driven (past participle), driving
    1a. To control the movement of (a vehicle);
      Thesaurus: control, steer, guide, direct, manage, lead, operate.
    1b. To be legally qualified to do so.
    intr
    2. To travel in a vehicle.
    3. To take or transport someone or something in a vehicle.
    4. To urge or force someone or something to move.
      Example: drive cattle
      Example: boats driven on to the beach by the storm
    5. To make someone or something get into a particular state or condition.
      Example: Her chatter drives me to distraction
      Example: It drove me crazy
      Thesaurus: impel, propel, instigate, urge, compel, induce, press, force, incite, motivate.
    6. To force by striking.
      Example: drove the nail into the wood
      Thesaurus: hit, strike, thrust.
    7. To produce motion in something; to make it operate.
      Example: machinery driven by steam
    8a. sport.
      In golf: to hit (a ball), especially from the tee and using a driver;
    8b. sport.
      In cricket: to hit (a ball) forward with an upright bat;
    8c. sport.
      To hit or kick (a ball, etc) with great force.
    9. To conduct or dictate.
      Example: drive a hard bargain
noun
    1. A trip in a vehicle; travel by road.
      Thesaurus: ride, trip, journey, outing, ramble, tour, expedition, excursion, jaunt, spin.
    2. A path for vehicles, leading from a private residence to the road outside. Also called driveway.
    3. A street title in an address.
      Form: Drive
    4. Energy and enthusiasm.
      Thesaurus: ambition, push, aggression, aggressiveness, get-up-and-go, verve, energy, willpower.
    5. An organized campaign; a group effort.
      Example: an economy drive
    6. Operating power, or a device supplying this.
    7. A forceful strike of a ball in various sports.
    8. A united movement forward, especially by a military force.
    9. A meeting to play a game, especially cards.
Derivative: drivability
noun
    Derivative: drivable
    adj
      Idiom: be driven by something
        To be motivated by it.
          Example: They were driven to steal by sheer hunger
      Idiom: be driving at something
        To intend or imply it as a meaning or conclusion
          Example: What is he driving at?
          Thesaurus: mean, suggest, imply, allude to, intimate, insinuate, indicate.
      Idiom: drive something home
        To make it clearly understood.
        To force (a bolt, nail, etc) completely in.
      Etymology: Anglo-Saxon drifan.





      drove1 past tense of drive




      drove2
      noun
        1. A moving herd of animals, especially cattle.
        2. A large moving crowd.
          Thesaurus: herd, horde, swarm, throng, mob, multitude, crowd, flock, gathering.
      Etymology: Anglo-Saxon draf herd.



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