mount
1 Americanverb (used with object)
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to mount stairs.
- Synonyms:
- scale
- Antonyms:
- descend
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to get up on (a platform, a horse, etc.).
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to set or place at an elevation.
to mount a house on stilts.
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to furnish with a horse or other animal for riding.
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to set or place (a person) on horseback.
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to organize, as an army.
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to prepare and launch, as an attack or a campaign.
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to raise or put into position for use, as a gun.
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(of a fortress or warship) to have or carry (guns) in position for use.
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to go or put on guard, as a sentry or watch.
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to attach to or fix on or in a support, backing, setting, etc..
to mount a photograph; to mount a diamond in a ring.
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to arrange for display.
to mount a museum exhibit.
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to provide (a play, musical comedy, opera, etc.) with scenery, costumes, and other equipment for production.
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to prepare (an animal body or skeleton) as a specimen.
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(of a male animal) to climb upon (a female) for copulation.
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Microscopy.
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to prepare (a slide) for microscopic investigation.
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to prepare (a sample) for examination by a microscope, as by placing it on a slide.
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verb (used without object)
noun
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the act or a manner of mounting.
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a horse, other animal, or sometimes a vehicle, as a bicycle, used, provided, or available for riding.
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an act or occasion of riding a horse, especially in a race.
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a support, backing, setting, or the like, on or in which something is, or is to be, mounted or fixed.
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an ornamental metal piece applied to a piece of wooden furniture.
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Microscopy. a prepared slide.
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a distinctive metal feature on a sheath or scabbard, as a locket or chape.
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Philately. hinge.
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Printing. a wooden or metal block to which a plate is secured for printing.
noun
verb
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to go up (a hill, stairs, etc); climb
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to get up on (a horse, a platform, etc)
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io increase; accumulate
excitement mounted
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(tr) to fix onto a backing, setting, or support
to mount a photograph
to mount a slide
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(tr) to provide with a horse for riding, or to place on a horse
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(of male animals) to climb onto (a female animal) for copulation
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(tr) to prepare (a play, musical comedy, etc) for production
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(tr) to plan and organize (a compaign, an exhibition, etc)
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(tr) military to prepare or launch (an operation)
the Allies mounted an offensive
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(tr) to prepare (a skeleton, dead animal, etc) for exhibition as a specimen
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(tr) to place or carry (weapons) in such a position that they can be fired
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See guard
noun
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a backing, setting, or support onto which something is fixed
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the act or manner of mounting
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a horse for riding
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a slide used in microscopy
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philately
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a small transparent pocket in an album for a postage stamp
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another word for hinge
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noun
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a mountain or hill: used in literature and (when cap.) in proper names
Mount Everest
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(in palmistry) any of the seven cushions of flesh on the palm of the hand
Related Words
See climb.
Other Word Forms
Etymology
Origin of mount1
First recorded in 1300–50; Middle English mounten, from Old French munter, monter, Vulgar Latin (unattested) montāre, derivative of Latin mont- (stem of mōns ) mount 2
Origin of mount2
First recorded before 900; Middle English mount(e), mont, munt(e), Old English munt “mount, hill, mountain,” from Latin mont- (inflectional stem of mōns ) “mountain, hill”
Explanation
To mount is to climb up something, like a ladder, or get on the back of something, like a horse. You can also mount something on another object, like a camera on a tripod or a sticker on a notebook. The word mountain can help you remember that one way to mount is to climb. You can mount a mountain or a flight of stairs. You can also mount a pony by getting on its back or a bicycle by climbing onto it. The oldest meaning of mount is, in fact, "mountain," from the Old French word mont, which has its root in the Latin montem for “mountain."
Vocabulary lists containing mount
The SAT: Multiple-Meaning Words, List 5
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The New SAT: Multiple-Meaning Words
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The ACT Reading Test: Multiple-Meaning Words, List 5
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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 original ground was replaced by the second Hampden Park in 1884, which was followed by the third version of the stadium - in Mount Florida - in 1903.
From BBC • May 13, 2026
Scientists at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have successfully reversed aging in blood-forming stem cells in mice by repairing defects in structures known as lysosomes.
From Science Daily • May 12, 2026
The Toba eruption was more than 10,000 times larger than the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, yet our species endured.
From Science Daily • May 11, 2026
Artist Karl Haendel, from L.A.’s Mount Washington neighborhood, considers himself a “handmade labor fetishist.”
From Los Angeles Times • May 8, 2026
He sold everything they owned, including their house and their vacation cabin on Mount Hood.
From "Storm Runners" by Roland Smith
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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.