cause
1 Americannoun
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a person or thing that acts, happens, or exists in such a way that some specific thing happens as a result; the producer of an effect.
You have been the cause of much anxiety.
What was the cause of the accident?
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the reason or motive for some human action.
The good news was a cause for rejoicing.
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good or sufficient reason.
to complain without cause;
to be dismissed for cause.
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Law.
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a ground of legal action; the matter over which a person goes to law.
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a case for judicial decision.
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any subject of discussion or debate.
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a principle, ideal, goal, or movement to which a person or group is dedicated.
the Socialist cause;
the human rights cause.
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the welfare of a person or group, seen as a subject of concern.
support for the cause of the American Indian.
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Philosophy.
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the end or purpose for which a thing is done or produced.
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Aristotelianism. any of the four things necessary for the movement or the coming into being of a thing, namely a material material cause, something to act upon it efficient cause, a form taken by the movement or development formal cause, and a goal or purpose final cause.
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verb (used with object)
idioms
conjunction
noun
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a person, thing, event, state, or action that produces an effect
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grounds for action; motive; justification
she had good cause to shout like that
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the ideals, etc, of a group or movement
the Communist cause
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the welfare or interests of a person or group in a dispute
they fought for the miners' cause
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a matter of widespread concern or importance
the cause of public health
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a ground for legal action; matter giving rise to a lawsuit
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the lawsuit itself
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(in the philosophy of Aristotle) any of four requirements for a thing's coming to be, namely material (material cause), its nature (formal cause), an agent (efficient cause), and a purpose (final cause)
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to join with (a person, group, etc) for a common objective
verb
Usage
What is a basic definition of cause? A cause is a person, thing, event, or action that triggers a resulting event. Cause can also mean a motivation or an ideal or goal that a person or group is dedicated to. Cause has several other senses as a noun and one as a verb.In manner of speaking, the cause tells you why something happened. A cause is the spark that lights a fire. The cause of you being sick might be a bacteria or a virus that harms your body. You giving your niece a birthday present might be the cause of her being happy. The word cause is often used with the word effect, which means a resulting action that happens because of a cause.
- Real-life examples: Faulty wiring may be the cause of an electrical fire. John Wilkes Booth was the cause of Abraham Lincoln’s death (because Booth shot Lincoln). A giant iceberg was the cause of the sinking of the Titanic.
- Used in a sentence: Experts are still trying to figure out the cause of the mysterious plane crash.
- Used in a sentence: My late-night partying caused me to fail my exam.
- Used in a sentence: The lawyer argued that the company had fired his client without good cause.
- Real-life examples: Antiracism is a cause that wants to end racism. Environmentalism is a cause that wants to protect the environment from damage. If a friend of yours is very sick and you start a collection to help with medical bills, that too is a cause.
- Used in a sentence: I donated $50 to the cancer charity because they have a good cause.
Related Words
Cause, occasion refer to the starting of effects into motion. A cause is an agency, perhaps acting through a long time, or a long-standing situation, that produces an effect: The cause of the quarrel between the two men was jealousy. An occasion is an event that provides an opportunity for the effect to become evident, or perhaps promotes its becoming evident: The occasion was the fact that one man's wages were increased. See reason.
Other Word Forms
- causability noun
- causable adjective
- causeless adjective
- causelessly adverb
- causelessness noun
- causer noun
- noncausable adjective
- self-caused adjective
- subcause noun
- uncausable adjective
- undercause noun
Etymology
Origin of cause1
First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English, from Latin causa “case, reason, sake”
Origin of 'cause1
First recorded in 1400–50; late Middle English; aphetic variant
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.
These materials are made of many tiny crystal grains packed together, and repeated charging and discharging can cause them to fracture.
From Science Daily
Time indoors looking at screens can cause eyeballs to elongate, leaving kids nearsighted for life.
He filed his appeal this month, claiming that he was not given cause for termination.
From Los Angeles Times
After January’s wildfires, local health authorities warned the soil could be riddled with harmful pollutants from burned-down homes and cars, including lead, a heavy metal that can cause irreversible brain damage when inhaled or ingested by young children.
From Los Angeles Times
They added that the fire began on the ground floor of the property and that there were not believed to be any suspicious circumstances surrounding the cause.
From BBC
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.