Antonyms for heavy
Grammar : Adj |
Spell : hev-ee |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈhɛv i |
- airy
- calm
- cheerful
- convenient
- courteous
- dry
- easy
- facile
- gay
- gentle
- graceful
- handy
- happy
- impoverished
- inconsequential
- insignificant
- joyful
- kind
- light
- lightweight
- little
- mild
- miniature
- moderate
- moving
- nice
- peaceful
- polite
- poor
- simple
- skinny
- slight
- small
- smoooth
- smooth
- soft
- thin
- tiny
- trivial
- underweight
- unimportant
- unsubstantial
Definition of heavy
Origin :- Old English hefig "heavy, having much weight; important, grave; oppressive; slow, dull," from Proto-Germanic *hafiga "containing something; having weight" (cf. Old Saxon, Old High German hebig, Old Norse hofugr, Middle Dutch hevich, Dutch hevig), from PIE *kap- "to grasp" (see capable). Jazz slang sense of "profound, serious" is from 1937 but would have been comprehensible to an Anglo-Saxon. Heavy industry recorded from 1932. Heavy metal attested by 1839 in chemistry; in nautical jargon from at least 1744 in sense "large-caliber guns on a ship.
- While we undervalue the nicely-balanced weight of broadsides which have lately been brought forward with all the grave precision of Cocker, we are well aware of the decided advantages of heavy metal. ["United Services Journal," London, 1830]
- As a type of rock music, from 1972.
- adj having great weight
- adj difficult, severe
- adj depressed, gloomy
- adj listless, slow
- It was rather a heavy tug, for the fish he had caught weighed at least fifty pounds.
- Extract from : « Brave and Bold » by Horatio Alger
- Evidences of heavy rainfall at certain times to be seen everywhere.
- Extract from : « Explorations in Australia » by John Forrest
- The weather is heavy and cloudy, and I hope to get some rain shortly.
- Extract from : « Explorations in Australia » by John Forrest
- A thousand pounds is a heavy venture for one so straitened as I am.
- Extract from : « Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. 327 » by Various
- This is especially true when we are face to face with a heavy deficit.
- Extract from : « United States Presidents' Inaugural Speeches » by Various
- He slouched slightly in his gait, like the heavy man accustomed to the saddle.
- Extract from : « Viviette » by William J. Locke
- We shall have to employ two men to move the heavy furniture.
- Extract from : « Grace Harlowe's Return to Overton Campus » by Jessie Graham Flower
- The flush of his own heavy meal kept his pallor from showing.
- Extract from : « Way of the Lawless » by Max Brand
- He drew his revolver, and with the heavy butt banged loudly on the door.
- Extract from : « Way of the Lawless » by Max Brand
- "We won't talk about the girl," said Andrew in a heavy voice.
- Extract from : « Way of the Lawless » by Max Brand
Synonyms for heavy
- abstruse
- abundant
- acroamatic
- ample
- apathetic
- arduous
- awkward
- beefy
- big
- boisterous
- built
- bulky
- burdensome
- chunky
- close
- cloudy
- comatose
- complex
- complicated
- confused
- considerable
- copious
- corpulent
- crestfallen
- cumbersome
- cumbrous
- damp
- dark
- dejected
- despondent
- disconsolate
- dismal
- downcast
- dull
- effortful
- elephantine
- enceinte
- esoteric
- excessive
- expectant
- fat
- fleshy
- formidable
- grave
- gravid
- grieving
- grievous
- gross
- hard
- harsh
- hebetudinous
- hefty
- huge
- indifferent
- intolerable
- knotty
- labored
- laborious
- laden
- large
- lead-footed
- leaden
- lethargic
- loaded
- lowering
- lumbering
- massive
- melancholy
- obese
- onerous
- oppressed
- oppressive
- overcast
- overweight
- parturient
- ponderous
- porcine
- portly
- pregnant
- profound
- recondite
- rough
- sad
- serious
- sluggish
- slumberous
- sodden
- soggy
- solemn
- sorrowful
- stifling
- stormy
- stout
- strenuous
- substantial
- tedious
- tempestuous
- toilsome
- top-heavy
- torpid
- tough
- troublesome
- turbulent
- two-ton
- unmanageable
- unwieldy
- vexatious
- violent
- wearisome
- weighted
- weighty
- wet
- wild
- zaftig
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019