Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • intransitive verb To hold or support while moving; bear.
  • intransitive verb To move or take from one place to another; transport.
  • intransitive verb Chiefly Southern US To escort or accompany.
  • intransitive verb To serve as a means for the conveyance of; transmit.
  • intransitive verb To communicate; pass on.
  • intransitive verb To express or contain.
  • intransitive verb To have (something) on the surface or skin; bear.
  • intransitive verb To hold or be capable of holding.
  • intransitive verb To support (a weight or responsibility).
  • intransitive verb To support the weight or responsibility of.
  • intransitive verb To keep or have on one's person.
  • intransitive verb To be pregnant with (offspring).
  • intransitive verb To hold and move (the body or a part of it) in a particular way.
  • intransitive verb To behave or conduct (oneself) in a specified manner.
  • intransitive verb To extend or continue in space, time, or degree.
  • intransitive verb To give impetus to; propel.
  • intransitive verb To take further; advance.
  • intransitive verb To take or seize, especially by force; capture.
  • intransitive verb To be successful in; win.
  • intransitive verb To gain victory, support, or acceptance for.
  • intransitive verb To win a majority of the votes in.
  • intransitive verb To gain the sympathy of; win over.
  • intransitive verb To include or keep on a list.
  • intransitive verb To have as an attribute or accompaniment.
  • intransitive verb To involve as a condition, consequence, or effect.
  • intransitive verb Physics To possess (an intrinsic property, such as color charge) or convey (a force) that governs particle interactions.
  • intransitive verb To transfer from one place, as a column, page, or book, to another.
  • intransitive verb To keep in stock; offer for sale.
  • intransitive verb To keep in one's accounts as a debtor.
  • intransitive verb To maintain or support (one that is weaker or less competent, for example).
  • intransitive verb To compensate for (a weaker member or partner) by one's performance.
  • intransitive verb To place before the public; print or broadcast.
  • intransitive verb To produce as a crop.
  • intransitive verb To provide forage for (livestock).
  • intransitive verb To sing (a melody, for example) on key.
  • intransitive verb Nautical To be equipped with (a mast or sail).
  • intransitive verb To cover (a distance) or advance beyond (a point or object) in one golf stroke.
  • intransitive verb To control and advance (a ball or puck).
  • intransitive verb Basketball To palm (the ball) in violation of the rules.
  • intransitive verb To act as a bearer.
  • intransitive verb To be transmitted or conveyed.

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Middle English carien, from Old North French carier, from carre, cart; see car.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

Middle English carrien, from Anglo-Norman carier (modern French: charrier). Replaced native Middle English ferien ("to carry, transport, convey") (from Old English ferian) and Middle English aberen ("to carry, bear, endure") (from Old English āberan).

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Examples

  • In the sentence, _I carry a BOOK_, the object, _book_, is required to complete the meaning of the transitive verb _carry_; so, also in the sentences, _I hold the

    Practical Grammar and Composition Thomas Wood

  • We bought an immense quantity of chickens and they all turned out to be roosters [laughter]; but I resolved -- I presume as William Nye says about the farm -- to carry it on; I would _carry_ on that farm as long as my wife's money lasted.

    Modern Eloquence: Vol II, After-Dinner Speeches E-O Various 1870

  • Mr. Kolding will in the short term carry through Danske Bank's strategic goals of raising interest margins, cutting costs and focusing on its customers, and will later work out a long-term strategy together with the management team, he said Monday.

    Danske Bank Names New CEO Gustav Sandstrom 2011

  • Yes, and when you carry jewelry in carry on luggage watch it like a hawk when the TSA guys in the US go through it.

    Page 2 2009

  • Yes, and when you carry jewelry in carry on luggage watch it like a hawk when the TSA guys in the US go through it.

    Page 2 2009

  • In the case of a public university, if carry is lawful, even if against policy, carry may (should) not be an unlawful act sufficient to allow the university to trespass a member of the public.

    The Volokh Conspiracy » Major legal win for Students for Concealed Carry on Campus 2010

  • Even if you have a valid CCW and concealed carry is allowed in national parks very few people will be able to concealed carry anyway.

    Brady Campaign Sues Over Park Gun Rule Dave Hurteau 2009

  • I have read that it is best to take jewelry in carry-on luggage as well.

    Shipping Items 2009

  • Even in Wisconsin, the home of the Progressive/Marxist bullshit movement in the US, open carry is allowed.

    Cheeseburger Gothic » Because i’m hell busy. 2009

  • However, this is not advisable in carry-on luggage, because it MAY NOT pass through security.

    Hints From Heloise Post 2010

  • I remember, many years ago, sitting on my parents’ bed as my father — a mild-mannered engineer — dug through their closet, pulling out blade after blade from his knife collection. “All this will be yours when I’m gone,” he joked, pointing to the panoply of fighting dirks, Swiss Army gadgets, and fat multitools that overflowed from the shelves, along with hunting gear, dozens of flashlights, and even a pistol or two.We were searching for an appropriate knife for me to take on our hike up a nearby mountain, just in case something terrible happened. As we sifted through the pile, my father said that when he was my age, he carried a pocket knife with him everywhere he went. I pointed out that would probably get me expelled from my middle school, but he just laughed. “That didn’t stop us. We wanted to be prepared for anything. You should carry it with you when you can.”Users would reveal the items they carry on their person every day, such as your wallet, keys, phone, or even a knife or twoScrounging for Father’s Day gifts for my dad over the past few years has introduced me to a world he would probably feel right at home in: “everyday carry,” or EDC. While the term — usually used as a noun, like “my EDC” — was originally born out of threads on outdoor enthusiast forums where users would reveal the items they carry on their person every day, such as your wallet, keys, phone, or even a knife or two, it’s now exploded into full-blown subculture.Since these EDC hubs began to sprout up all over the web, from the popular Reddit community /r/EDC to the lifestyle blog EverydayCarry.com, the meaning of the acronym has shifted from what people do carry to what they should carry, with a focus on “readiness” — often at a fairly steep price point. While proponents of the EDC lifestyle stress that personal carry is ultimately dependent on your needs and personality, there’s a strain of perfectibility that runs just under the surface; a creeping sense that the next piece of gear you buy will be the one that finally makes it into your ideal.The world of EDC has many entry points, and for r/EDC user Tim Hayes, having the power to control situations that crop up in everyday life was a big part of the appeal. He came to the hobby through a particularly popular 2013 YouTube video featuring Mythbusters host Adam Savage. (Several people I talked to also cited this video as a major turning point.) The concept of treasuring the seemingly mundane objects that you carry every day was inculcated in Hayes by his father, who gave him a wallet that belonged to his own grandfather as a symbol of his entry to adulthood. As a former Boy Scout, Hayes was more than familiar with the concept of “readiness,” so when he stumbled upon page after page of carefully posed shots of high-end gear like flashlights and folding knives, he felt right at home. “EDC has been crucial to me, especially in the subcategory of vehicle everyday carry,” he says. “I’ve used my carry to treat small cuts and burns, tie down loads in and on my car, repair my brakes when I was stranded dozens of miles from home, help a driver out of a snowbank.

    Meet the men obsessed with carrying all the right stuff Steven T. Wright 2019

  • EDC stands for “Every Day Carry.” Your everyday carry is the collection of items you carry with you in your pockets or your bag on a daily basis.

    What is EDC? Everyday Carry: The Ultimate Beginner’s Guide Bernard Capulong 2024

  • What's an essential everyday carry for you lot?

    What's an essential everyday carry for you lot? MusicalMagicman 2025

Comments

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  • In Singapore, a disposable plastic shopping bag. Probably an abruption of carrier bag.

    November 17, 2011