gravity

English

Etymology

    Category:English terms derived from Latin#GRAVITY%7CGRAVITYCategory:English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European#GRAVITYCategory:English terms derived from French#GRAVITYCategory:English terms borrowed from French#GRAVITYCategory:English entries referencing missing etymons#GRAVITYCategory:English learned borrowings from Latin#GRAVITY%7CGRAVITYCategory:English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *gʷreh₂-#GRAVITYCategory:English terms derived from Proto-Italic#GRAVITYCategory:English terms borrowed from Latin#GRAVITY%7CGRAVITYCategory:English terms derived from Latin#GRAVITYCategory:English terms suffixed with -ity#GRAVITYCategory:Pages with etymology trees#GRAVITYCategory:English entries with etymology trees#GRAVITYCategory:Pages using etymon with no ID#GRAVITY

    Borrowed from FrenchCategory:English terms borrowed from French#GRAVITYCategory:English terms derived from French#GRAVITY gravité (seriousness, solemnity; severity; (physics) gravity), or from its etymon LatinCategory:English terms borrowed from Latin#GRAVITYCategory:English learned borrowings from Latin#GRAVITYCategory:English terms derived from Latin#GRAVITY gravitās (heaviness, weight; seriousness; severity) + English -ity (suffix forming nouns, especially abstract nouns)Category:English terms suffixed with -ity#GRAVITY. Gravitās is derived from gravis (heavy; grave, serious) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-EuropeanCategory:English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European#GRAVITY *gʷreh₂- (heavy)) + -tās (suffix forming feminine abstract nouns indicating states of being). The English word was first used figuratively, and gained the senses relating to physical qualities in the 17th century.[1] Doublet of gravitasCategory:English doublets#GRAVITY.

    Pronunciation

    Noun

    gravity (countable and uncountable, plural gravities)Category:English lemmas#GRAVITYCategory:English nouns#GRAVITYCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITYCategory:English countable nouns#GRAVITYCategory:English countable nouns#GRAVITYCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#GRAVITYCategory:Pages with entries#GRAVITYCategory:Pages with 1 entry#GRAVITY

    1. Senses relating to seriousness.
      1. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY) Of an activity such as a ceremony, a person's conduct, etc.: the quality of being deeply serious and solemn, especially in a dignified manner; seriousness, solemnity; (countableCategory:English countable nouns#GRAVITY, archaicCategory:English terms with archaic senses#GRAVITY or obsoleteCategory:English terms with obsolete senses#GRAVITY) a serious or solemn thing, such as a matter, a comment, etc. [from early 16th c.]
        Synonyms: graveness, soberness, sobriety, weightiness
        Antonyms: flippancy, levity, unseriousness
      2. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY) Of an activity, situation, words, etc.: the quality of having important or serious consequences; importance, seriousness.
        I hope you appreciate the gravity of the situation.Category:English terms with usage examples#GRAVITY
      3. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY, obsoleteCategory:English terms with obsolete senses#GRAVITY) Authority, influence, weight; also, used as a title for a person with authority or influence.
    2. Senses relating to physical qualities. [from 17th c.]
      1. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY, chiefly musicCategory:en:Music#GRAVITY) The lowness in pitch of a note, a sound, etc.
      2. (physicsCategory:en:Physics#GRAVITY)
        1. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY) Synonym of gravitation (the fundamental force of attraction which exists between all matter in the universe that tends to draw bodies towards each other, due to matter causing the curvature of spacetime); also, a physical law attempting to account for the phenomena of this force.
          Aristotelian gravity    Newtonian gravityCategory:English terms with collocations#GRAVITY
        2. (datedCategory:English dated terms#GRAVITY)
          1. (countableCategory:English countable nouns#GRAVITY) Synonym of g-force (the acceleration of a body relative to the freefall acceleration due to any local gravitational field, expressed in multiples of g0 (the mean acceleration due to gravity (sense 2.2.1) at the Earth's surface)).
          2. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY) Dated except in centre of gravity: specific gravity or relative density (a dimensionless measure which is the ratio of the mass of a substance to that of some reference substance (chiefly an equal volume of water at 4°C)); also, heaviness, weight.
            Synonym: weightfulness
            • 1750 November 24 (Gregorian calendar), Samuel Johnson, “No. 69. Tuesday, November 13. 1750.”, in The Rambler, volume III, Edinburgh: [[] Sands, Murray, and Cochran]; sold by W. Gordon, C. Wright, J. Yair, [], published 1750, →OCLC, page 132:
              Thus one generation is alvvays the ſcorn and vvonder of the other; and the notions of the old and young are like liquors of different gravity and texture, vvhich can never unite.
              Category:English terms with quotations#GRAVITY
        3. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY, obsoleteCategory:English terms with obsolete senses#GRAVITY) The tendency to have weight and thus move downwards, formerly believed to be an inherent quality of some objects.
          Antonym: levity
          • 1627 (indicated as 1626), Francis [Bacon], “VIII. Century. [Experiments Solitary, Touching Attraction by Similitude of Substance.]”, in Sylua Syluarum: Or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centuries. [], London: [] William Rawley []; [p]rinted by J[ohn] H[aviland] for William Lee [], →OCLC, paragraph 704, page 182:
            [] Similitude of Subſtance vvill cauſe Attraction, vvhere the Body is vvholly freed from the Motion of Grauitie: For if that vvere taken avvay, Lead vvould dravv Lead, and Gold vvould dravv Gold, and Iron vvould dravv Iron, vvithout the helpe of the Load-Stone. But this ſame Motion of VVeight or Grauitie, [] doth kill the other Motion, except it ſelfe be killed by a violent Motion; []
            Category:English terms with quotations#GRAVITY
          • 1646, Thomas Browne, “Concerning the Loadstone, therein of Sundry Common Opinions, and Received Relations, Naturall, Historicall, Medicall, Magicall”, in Pseudodoxia Epidemica: [], London: [] T[homas] H[arper] for Edward Dod, [], →OCLC, 2nd book, page 72:
            [I]t is not impoſſible (though hardly feiſible) by a ſingle Loadſtone to ſuſpend an iron in the ayre, the iron being artificially placed, and at a diſtance guided tovvards the ſtone, untill it find the nevvtrall point vvherein its gravity juſt equalls the magneticall quality, the on exactly extolling as much as the other depreſſeth; []
            Category:English terms with quotations#GRAVITY
          • 1656, Tho[mas] Stanley, “[The Doctrine of Aristotle.] Chap[ter] VI. Of Heaven.”, in The History of Philosophy, the Second Volume, volume II, London: [] Humphrey Moseley, and Thomas Dring: [], →OCLC, page 56:
            Heaven hath neither gravity nor levity; this is manifeſt from its motion vvhich is circular; not from the center vvhich is proper to light things; nor to the center, as is proper to heavy, but about the center.
            Category:English terms with quotations#GRAVITY
          • 1661, Joseph Glanvill, chapter XVII, in The Vanity of Dogmatizing: Or Confidence in Opinions. [], London: [] E. C[otes] for Henry Eversden [], →OCLC, pages 85–86:
            [The Earth] muſt perſevere in Motion, unleſs obſtructed by a Miracle. Neither can Gravity, vvhich makes great bodies hard of Remove, be any hindrance to the Earths motion: ſince even the Peripatetick Maxime, Nihil gravitat in ſuo loco [nothing weighs in its place], vvill exempt it from this indiſposing quality; vvhich is nothing but the tendency of its parts, vvhich are raviſh't from it, to their deſired Centre.
            Category:English terms with quotations#GRAVITY
          • 1678, Thomas Hobbes, “Of Gravity and Gravitation”, in Decameron Physiologicum: Or, Ten Dialogues of Natural Philosophy. [], London: [] J[ames] C[ottrel] for W[illiam] Crook[e] [], →OCLC, page 84:
            [] Gravity is an Intrinſecal Quality by vvhich a Body ſo qualified deſcendeth perpendicularly tovvards the Superfices of the Earth.
            Category:English terms with quotations#GRAVITY
      3. (uncountableCategory:English uncountable nouns#GRAVITY, obsoleteCategory:English terms with obsolete senses#GRAVITY, rareCategory:English terms with rare senses#GRAVITY) The quality of being unable or unwilling to move quickly; heaviness, sluggishness.

    Derived terms

    Translations

    References

    1. gravity, n.”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2025; gravity, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.

    Further reading

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