Gray (gr ), Asa 1810-1888. American botanist who greatly enlarged and improved the description of North American flora and was the chief American advocate of Charles Darwin's theories. |
Gray, Robert 1755-1806. American explorer who twice circumnavigated the globe (1787-1790 and 1790-1793) and discovered Grays Harbor and the Columbia River (1792). |
Gray, Thomas 1716-1771. British poet considered a forerunner of English romanticism. His most famous work is Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1751). |
gray 1 also grey (gr )adj. gray·er also grey·er, gray·est also grey·est 1. Of or relating to an achromatic color of any lightness between the extremes of black and white. 2. a. Dull or dark: a gray, rainy afternoon. b. Lacking in cheer; gloomy: a gray mood. 3. a. Having gray hair; hoary. b. Old or venerable. 4. Intermediate in character or position, as with regard to a subjective matter: the gray area between their differing opinions on the film's morality. n.1. An achromatic color of any lightness between the extremes of black and white. 2. An object or animal of the color gray. 3. often Graya. A member of the Confederate Army in the Civil War. b. The Confederate Army. v. grayed also greyed, gray·ing also grey·ing, grays also greys v.intr.1. To become gray. 2. a. To become old; age. b. To include a large or increasing proportion of older people: "Federal food programs can't keep up with the nation's rapidly graying population" (Michael J. McCarthy).
[Middle English grei, from Old English gr g.]
gray ly adj. gray ness n. |
gray 2 (gr )n. Abbr. Gy The SI unit for the energy absorbed from ionizing radiation, equal to one joule per kilogram.
[After Louis Harold Gray (1905-1965), British radiobiologist.] |
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Adj. | 1. | greyed - deprived of color; "colors dulled by too much sun"; "greyed with the dust of the road" |
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