half
Americannoun
plural
halves-
one of two equal or approximately equal parts of a divisible whole, as an object, or unit of measure or time; a part of a whole equal or almost equal to the remainder.
-
a quantity or amount equal to such a part (½).
-
Sports. either of two equal periods of play, usually with an intermission or rest period separating them.
-
one of two; a part of a pair.
-
Informal.
-
the sum of 50 cents.
Four dimes and two nickels make a half.
-
Baseball. either of the two units of play into which an inning is divided, the visiting team batting in the first unit and the home team batting in the second.
-
Football. a halfback.
-
British Informal.
-
a half-crown coin.
-
the sum of a half crown; two shillings, sixpence.
-
a half pint.
He ordered a half of ale.
-
adjective
-
being one of two equal or approximately equal parts of a divisible whole.
a half quart.
-
being half or about half of anything in degree, amount, length, etc..
at half speed; half sleeve.
-
partial or incomplete.
half measures.
adverb
idioms
-
by half, by very much; by far.
She was too talented by half for her routine role.
-
not half,
-
not at all; not really.
His first attempts at painting are not half bad.
-
half.
-
-
half again as much / many, as much as 50 percent more.
This mug holds half again as much coffee as the smaller one.
-
not the half of, a significant yet relatively minor part of something that remains to be described in full: Also not half of, not half.
He accused them of being responsible for the error, and that's not the half of the story.
-
half in two, in or into two parts; in half.
Cut the cake half in two.
-
in half, divided into halves.
The vase broke in half.
noun
-
-
either of two equal or corresponding parts that together comprise a whole
-
a quantity equalling such a part
half a dozen
-
-
half a pint, esp of beer
-
a small drink of spirits, esp whisky
-
sport the half of the pitch regarded as belonging to one team
-
golf an equal score on a hole or round with an opponent
-
(in various games) either of two periods of play separated by an interval (the first half and second half )
-
a half-price ticket on a bus, train, etc
-
short for half-hour
-
short for halfpenny
-
sport short for halfback
-
obsolete a half-year period
-
humorous a person's wife or husband
-
by an excessive amount or to an excessive degree
he's too arrogant by half
-
(used with a negative) without being thorough or exhaustive
we don't do things by halves
-
-
to share the expenses (of something with one other person)
-
to share the whole amount (of something with another person)
to go halves on an orange
-
determiner
adjective
adverb
-
to the amount or extent of a half
-
to a great amount or extent
-
partially; to an extent
-
informal 30 minutes after two o'clock
-
to have the intention of
-
informal
-
not in any way
he's not half clever enough
-
really; very; indeed
he isn't half stupid
-
certainly; yes, indeed
-
prefix
-
one of two equal parts
half-moon
-
related by one parent only
half-sister
-
not completely; partly
half-hardy
Grammar
See well 1.
Etymology
Origin of half
before 900; Middle English; Old English h ( e ) alf; cognate with German Halb, Old Norse halfr, Gothic halbs
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
In 2024, $8.23 billion worth of goods were exported under the accord, half of which came from South Africa, mainly cars, precious metals and farm produce.
From Barron's
Shares fell nearly 47% over the next three and a half weeks, through May 13, when Witty stepped down.
From Barron's
Hiring got off to a slow start for the year, with private employers adding just half of the expected number of jobs in January.
From Barron's
That was about half of the expected gain.
From Barron's
He believes demand will improve for the rest of the year, particularly in the second half, as people look for cheaper alternatives to power their homes.
From MarketWatch
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.