Load Definition

lōd
loaded, loading, loads
noun
loads
A weight or mass that is supported.
The load on an arch.
American Heritage
The amount that can be or usually is carried.
A carload of coal.
Webster's New World
The overall force to which a structure is subjected in supporting a weight or mass or in resisting externally applied forces.
American Heritage
Something carried or to be carried at one time or in one trip; burden; cargo.
Webster's New World
Something carried with difficulty.
Webster's New World
verb
loaded, loading, loads
To put something to be carried into or upon; esp., to fill or cover with as much as can be carried.
To load a wagon with wheat.
Webster's New World
To put into or upon a carrier.
To load coal into a truck.
Webster's New World
To put on, receive, or take on passengers, goods, fuel, etc.
The bus is loading now.
Webster's New World
To provide or fill nearly to overflowing; heap.
Loaded the table with food.
American Heritage
To weigh down with or as with a heavy load; burden; oppress.
Webster's New World
idiom
get a load of
  • To look at; notice.
  • To listen to:

    Get a load of this!

American Heritage
have a load on
  • To be intoxicated.
American Heritage
take a load off
  • To sit or lie down.
American Heritage
get a load of
  • to listen to or hear
  • to look at or see
Webster's New World
have a load on
  • to be intoxicated
Webster's New World

Other Word Forms of Load

Noun

Singular:
load
Plural:
loads

Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Load

Origin of Load

  • From Middle English lode, loade, from Old English lād (“course, journey; way, street, waterway; leading, carrying; maintenance, support"), from Proto-Germanic *laidō (“leading, way"), from Proto-Indo-European *leit- (“to go, go forth, die"), from Proto-Indo-European *lei- (“to be slimy, be sticky, slide, glide, stroke"). Etymologically identical with lode, which preserved the older meaning. Cognate with Middle Low German leide (“entourage, escort"), German Leite (“line, course, load"), Swedish led (“way, trail, line"), Icelandic leið (“way, course, route"). The sense of "˜burden' developed in the 13th century.

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English lode alteration (influenced by laden to load) of lade course, way from Old English lād leit- in Indo-European roots

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  • The verb load "˜to charge with a load' is derived from the noun, in the 16th century, and was influenced by the etymologically unrelated lade, which it largely supplanted.

    From Wiktionary

Find Similar Words

Find similar words to load using the buttons below.

Words Starting With

Words Ending With

Unscrambles

load