climb
Americanverb (used without object)
-
to go up or ascend, especially by using the hands and feet or feet only.
She climbed up the ladder.
- Antonyms:
- descend
-
to rise slowly by or as if by continued effort.
The car climbed laboriously to the top of the mountain.
-
to ascend or rise.
The plane climbed rapidly and we were soon at 35,000 feet.
Temperatures climbed into the 80s yesterday.
-
to slope upward.
The road climbs steeply up to the house.
-
(of a plant) to ascend by twining or by means of tendrils, adhesive tissues, etc..
The ivy climbed to the roof.
-
to proceed or move by using the hands and feet, especially on an elevated place; crawl.
to climb along a branch;
to climb around on the roof.
-
to ascend in prominence, fortune, etc..
From lowly beginnings he climbed to the highest office in the land.
verb (used with object)
-
to ascend, go up, or get to the top of, especially by the use of the hands and feet or feet alone or by continuous or strenuous effort.
to climb a rope;
to climb the stairs;
to climb a mountain.
- Antonyms:
- descend
-
to go to the top of and over.
The prisoners climbed the wall and escaped.
noun
-
a climbing; an ascent by climbing.
It was a long climb to the top of the hill.
- Antonyms:
- descent
-
a place to be climbed.
That peak is quite a climb.
verb phrase
-
climb down
-
to descend, especially by using both hands and feet.
She climbed down from the treehouse and went to wash up for supper.
-
Chiefly British. to retreat from a policy, opinion, position in a debate, etc..
He climbed down from that argument once he saw that it was based on incorrect data.
-
-
climb the walls to become tense or frantic.
After a week stuck inside the house, the kids were climbing the walls.
verb
-
to go up or ascend (stairs, a mountain, etc)
-
(often foll by along) to progress with difficulty
to climb along a ledge
-
to rise to a higher point or intensity
the temperature climbed
-
to incline or slope upwards
the road began to climb
-
to ascend in social position
-
(of plants) to grow upwards by twining, using tendrils or suckers, etc
-
informal (foll by into) to put (on) or get (into)
-
to be a climber or mountaineer
noun
-
the act or an instance of climbing
-
a place or thing to be climbed, esp a route in mountaineering
Related Words
Climb, ascend, mount, scale imply a moving upward. To climb is to make one's way upward, often with effort: to climb a mountain. Ascend, in its literal meaning (“to go up”), is general, but it now usually suggests a gradual or stately movement, with or without effort, often to a considerable degree of altitude: to ascend the heights; to ascend the Himalayas. Mount may be interchangeable with ascend, but also suggests climbing on top of or astride of: to mount a platform, a horse. Scale, a more literary word, implies difficult or hazardous climbing up or over something: to scale a summit.
Other Word Forms
- climbable adjective
- half-climbing adjective
- nonclimbable adjective
- nonclimbing adjective
- reclimb verb (used with object)
- unclimbable adjective
- unclimbed adjective
- unclimbing adjective
Etymology
Origin of climb
First recorded before 1000; Middle English climben, Old English climban; cognate with Dutch, German klimmen; akin to clamber
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.
The week the movie soundtrack climbed to No. 1 on the albums chart, Billboard reported that it racked up more than 141 million streams across all its songs.
Analysts tracked by FactSet are betting that Venture Global stock can regain some lost ground, but few, if any, see it climbing back to its IPO level in the next year.
From Barron's
The SOX’s 50-day moving average, which is a closely followed short-term trend trackers, has recently climbed the furthest above its 200-day moving average — a key long-term trend tracker — than it has in years.
From MarketWatch
The pandemic may have waned, but my book stack count continued to climb, peaking in 2023 after reading 52 books, averaging one per week.
From Los Angeles Times
This year’s rally in precious metals has extended beyond just gold, which has climbed to several new records in both nominal and inflation-adjusted terms.
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.