Synonyms:
bear, convey, move, sustain, transmit, bring, lift, remove, take, transport.
A person may
bear a load either when in motion or at rest; he
carries it only when in motion. The stooping
Atlas
bears the world on his shoulders; swiftly moving Time
carries the hour-glass and scythe; a person may
be said either to
bear or to
carry a scar, since it is upon him whether in motion or at rest. If an object is to be
moved from the place we occupy, we say
carry; if to the place we occupy, we say
bring. A messenger
carries
a letter to a correspondent, and
brings an answer.
Take is often used in this sense in place of
carry; as,
take
that letter to the office.
Carry often signifies to
transport by personal strength, without reference to the
direction; as, that is more than he can
carry; yet, even so, it would not be admissible to say
carry it to me, or
carry it here; in such case we must say
bring. To
lift is simply to raise from the ground, tho but for an instant,
with no reference to holding or moving; one may be able to
lift what he could not
carry. The figurative uses of
carry are very numerous; as, to
carry an election,
carry the country,
carry (in the sense of
capture) a fort,
carry an audience,
carry a stock of goods, etc. Compare CONVEY; KEEP; SUPPORT.
Antonyms:
drop, fall under, give up, let go, shake off, throw down, throw off.
Prepositions:
To carry coals
to Newcastle; carry nothing
from, or
out of, this house; he carried these qualities
into all he did;
carry
across the street,
over the bridge,
through the woods,
around or
round the corner;
beyond the river; the
cable was carried
under the sea.
* * * * *
CATASTROPHE.
Synonyms:
calamity, denouement, mischance, mishap, cataclysm, disaster, misfortune, sequel.
A
cataclysm or
catastrophe is some great convulsion or momentous event that may or may not be a cause of
misery to man. In
calamity, or
disaster, the thought of human suffering is always present. It has been held by
many geologists that numerous
catastrophes or
cataclysms antedated the existence of man. In literature, the
final event of a drama is the
catastrophe, or
denouement.
Misfortune ordinarily suggests less of suddenness
and violence than
calamity or
disaster, and is especially applied to that which is lingering or enduring in its
effects. In history, the end of every great war or the fall of a nation is a
catastrophe, tho it may not be a
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