A free service provided by Writers Nexus International

Writing Resources:
  • New Novelist Software
  • Writer Circles
  • Author Me
  • FirstWriter.com
  • Novel Advice
  • Robin's Nest for Writers
  • The Scriptorium
  • Women on Writing


A Writer's Dictionary:

pressing Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with P » press on, forward ... prevent » pressing


press1
verb presses, pressed, pressing
    tr & intr
    1a. To push steadily, especially with the finger;
      Example: press the bell
      Thesaurus: push, depress, force down.
    1b. To push it; to apply pressure to it.
      Example: press down on the accelerator
      Thesaurus: push, thrust, drive, force, pressurize.
      Form: press against something (often)
      Form: press on something
      Form: press down on something
    2. To hold something firmly against something; to flatten.
      Example: pressed her nose against the glass
    3. To compress or squash.
      Thesaurus: compress, flatten, iron, crush, mash, jam, mill, squeeze, force down, pressurize; Antonym: expand.
    4. To squeeze (eg someone's hand) affectionately.
      Thesaurus: hug, embrace, hold, caress, clasp, encircle, enfold.
    5. To preserve (plants) by flattening and drying, eg between the pages of a book.
    6a. To squeeze (fruit) to extract juice;
    6b. To extract (juice) from fruit by squeezing.
    7. To iron (clothes, etc).
    8. To urge or compel someone; to ask them insistently.
    9. To insist on something; to urge recognition or discussion of it.
      Example: press your claim
      Example: press the point
    10. law.
      To bring (charges) officially against someone.
    11. To produce (eg a record noun 4) from a mould by a compressing process.
noun presses
    1. An act of pressing.
    2. Any apparatus for pressing, flattening, squeezing, etc.
    3. A printing press.
    4. The process or art of printing.
    5. A printing house.
    6a. Newspapers or journalists in general;
      Thesaurus: news media, reporters, journalists, writers, columnists, correspondents, photographers, papers, paparazzi, hacks, fourth estate.
      Form: the press
    6b. Belonging or relating to the newspaper industry.
      Example: a press photographer
    7. Newspaper publicity or reviews received by a show, book, etc.
      Example: got a poor press
    8. A crowd.
      Example: a press of onlookers
    (Scots)
    9. A cupboard.
Idiom: go to press
    Said of a book, etc: to be sent for printing.
Etymology: 13c: from French presser, from Latin premere, pressum to press.

Phrasal Verb: press for something
    To demand it.
      Example: press for a payrise
Phrasal Verb: press on, ahead or forward
    To hurry on; to continue, especially in spite of difficulties.
Phrasal Verb: press something on someone
    To insist on giving it to them.
Info:
    There is often uncertainty as to whether collective nouns such as press should be followed by a singular or plural verb. Either is correct, depending on whether the group is being thought of as a single unit or as a number of individuals.




press2
verb presses, pressed, pressing
    1. To force (men) into the army or navy.
    2. To put it or them to use in a way that was not originally intended.
      Form: press something into service (especially)
      Form: press someone into service
Etymology: 16c: from older prest to recruit into military service, originally ‘enlistment money'.





pressing
adj
    1. Urgent.
      Example: pressing engagements
      Thesaurus: important, serious, high-priority, crucial, exigent, vital, urgent, imperative, importunate, burning, essential, constraining, crowding.
noun
    1. In the music industry: a number of records produced from a single mould.
    2. sport.
      The tactic of pressurizing opponents when they have possession, in order to try and win possession from them, eg by marking very closely.


Click Here