Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- adjective Of definite shape and volume; not liquid or gaseous.
- adjective Mathematics Of or relating to three-dimensional geometric figures or bodies.
- adjective Firm or compact in substance.
- adjective Not hollowed out.
- adjective Being the same substance or color throughout.
- adjective Having no gaps or breaks; continuous.
- adjective Acting together; unanimous.
- adjective Written without a hyphen or space. For example, the word software is a solid compound.
- adjective Printing Having no leads between the lines.
- adjective Of good quality.
- adjective Substantial; hearty.
- adjective Sound; reliable.
- adjective Financially sound.
- adjective Upstanding or dependable.
- adjective Slang Excellent; first-rate.
- noun A substance having a definite shape and volume; one that is neither liquid nor gaseous.
- noun Mathematics A geometric figure having three dimensions.
- adverb Without a break or opening; completely or continuously.
- adverb As a whole; unanimously.
from The Century Dictionary.
- Of uniform color; self-colored: a pigeon-fanciers' term.
- Resisting flexure; not to be bent without force; capable of tangential stress: said of a kind of material substance. See II., 1.
- Completely filled up; compact; without cavities, pores, or interstices; not hollow: as, a solid ball, as distinguished from a hollow one; solid soda-water, not frothy.
- Firm; strong: as, a solid pier; a solid wall.
- In botany, of a fleshy, uniform, undivided substance, as a bulb or root; not spongy or hollow within, as a stem.
- In anatomy and zoology:
- Hard, compact, or firm in consistency; having no cavities or spongy structure: opposed to spongiose, porous, hollow, cancellate, excavated, etc.
- In entomology, specifically, formed of a single joint, or of several joints so closely applied that they appear to be one: especially said of the capitulum or club of capitate antennæ.
- Having three dimensions; having length, breadth, and thickness; cubic: as, a solid foot contains 1,728 solid inches.
- Sound; not weak; strong.
- Substantial, as opposed to frivolous, fallacious, or the like; worthy of credit, trust, or esteem; not empty or vain; real; true; just; valid; firm; strong; hence, satisfactory: as, solid arguments; solid comfort; solid sense.
- Not light, trifling, or superficial; grave; profound.
- Financially sound or safe; possessing plenty of capital; wealthy; well-established; reliable.
- Unanimous, or practically unanimous: as, a solid vote; the solid South.
- Without break or opening, as a wall or façade.
- Smooth; even; unbroken; unvaried: unshaded: noting a color or pigment.
- Without the liquor, as oysters: said in measuring: opposite to in liquor.
- With reference to fabrics, etc., a uniform color.
- Synonyms Dense.
- Stable, weighty, important.
- noun A body which throughout its mass (and not merely at its surface) resists for an indefinite time a sufficiently small force that tends to alter its equilibrium figure, always springing back into shape after the force is removed; a body possessing elasticity of figure.
- noun In geometry, a body or magnitude which has three dimensions—length, breadth, and thickness—being thus distinguished from a surface, which has but two dimensions, and from a line, which has but one.
- noun plural In anatomy, all parts of the body which are not fluid: as, the solids and fluids of the body.
- noun plural In printing, the parts of an engraving which show black or solid in print.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun A substance that is held in a fixed form by cohesion among its particles; a substance not fluid.
- noun (Geom.) A magnitude which has length, breadth, and thickness; a part of space bounded on all sides.
- noun (Geom.) See
Revolution , n., 5. - adjective Having the constituent parts so compact, or so firmly adhering, as to resist the impression or penetration of other bodies; having a fixed form; hard; firm; compact; -- opposed to
fluid andliquid or toplastic , like clay, or toincompact , like sand.
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Great Britain's credit is solid; that's the word, _solid_: and if that -- er -- solidarity holds true of our monetary system with "-- here Mr Pamphlett expanded and contracted his fingers as if gathering gossamers --" its delicate and far-reaching complexities ...
Nicky-Nan, Reservist Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch 1903
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The advantages which it has over the old solid form are, that it is colourless and nearly tasteless, and never forms concretions in the bowels, as the _solid_ magnesia, if persevered in for any length of time, sometimes does.
Advice to a Mother on the Management of Her Children Pye Henry Chavasse 1844
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I think we use the term solid bookings in terms of the thanksgiving timeframe I mean historically is always been a very good time of year for us anyway because of the discretionary traveler that we had historically same into the Christmas timeframe.
JetBlue Airways Corporation CEO Discusses Q3 2010 Earnings - Call Transcript -- Seeking Alpha 2010
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Gameplay wise, again I'll use the term solid, I'll also use the term unoriginal - not that that's necessarily a bad thing.
1UP RSS feed 2009
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United Parcel Service Inc. forecast what it called a "solid" holiday shipping season Monday, saying volume during the hectic week before Christmas will be up 6.2% from last year.
UPS Projects Late Holiday Rush Bob Sechler 2011
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Goolsbee pointed to the addition of 238,000 jobs in the manufacturing sector since 2010 and what he called "solid" increases in specific sectors.
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Goolsbee pointed to the addition of 238,000 jobs in the manufacturing sector since 2010 and what he called "solid" increases in specific sectors.
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But parents of school-age children are not what you call a solid Democrat constituency h/t itrytobenice.
Obama’s horrible September 8th tactical blunder - E_Pluribus_Unum’s blog - RedState 2009
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ROBERTS: At a briefing this weekend, U.S. officials displayed what they called solid evidence that Iran is arming Shiites in Iraq.
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The head of the CIA search team, David Kay, said investigators are making what he called solid progress.
mager commented on the word solid
Better than liquid or gas ;)
October 16, 2007
ruzuzu commented on the word solid
"Completely filled up; compact; without cavities, pores, or interstices; not hollow: as, a solid ball, as distinguished from a hollow one; solid soda-water, not frothy."
--from the Century Dictionary
September 17, 2014
bilby commented on the word solid
A senator I was interviewing recently said 'do a solid' and at the moment I had my head in the press conference; I didn't realise until afterwards that I have no idea what this means. He's not that young, though younger than me. And a keen surfer, so probably jargoned-up to the eyeballs.
July 11, 2022