Definitions for loaded
loaded
load·ed
Spelling: [loh-did]
IPA: /ˈloʊ dɪd/
Loaded is a 6 letter English word.
It's valid Scrabble word worth 8 points.
It's valid Words with friends word worth 9 points.
You can make 82 anagrams from letters in loaded (addelo).
Definitions for loaded
noun
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anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo:
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the quantity that can be or usually is carried at one time, as in a cart.
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this quantity taken as a unit of measure or weight or a discrete quantity (usually used in combination):
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the quantity borne or sustained by something; burden:
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the weight supported by a structure or part.
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the amount of work assigned to or to be done by a person, team, department, machine, or mechanical system:
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something that weighs down or oppresses like a burden; onus:
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loads, Informal. a great quantity or number:
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the charge for a firearm.
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a commission charged to buyers of mutual-fund shares.
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Engineering. any of the forces that a structure is calculated to oppose, comprising any unmoving and unvarying force (dead load) any load from wind or earthquake, and any other moving or temporary force (live load)
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Electricity.
the power delivered by a generator, motor, power station, or transformer.
a device that receives power.
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Mechanics. the external resistance overcome by an engine, dynamo, or the like, under given conditions, measured and expressed in terms of the power required.
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Geology. the burden of sediment being carried by a stream or river.
Compare bed load.
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Slang. a sufficient amount of liquor drunk to cause intoxication:
Idioms
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loaded for bear, Informal. bear2 (def 11).
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get a load of, Slang.
to look at; notice; observe.
to listen to with interest:
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load the dice, to put someone or something in a advantageous or disadvantageous position; affect or influence the result:
adverb
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loads, Informal. very much; a great deal:
adjective
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bearing or having a load; full:
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containing ammunition or an explosive charge:
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(of a word, statement, or argument) charged with emotional or associative significance that hinders rational or unprejudiced consideration of the terms involved in a discourse.
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Slang.
having a great deal of money; rich.
under the influence of alcohol; drunk; intoxicated.
under the influence of drugs.
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(of dice) fraudulently weighted so as to increase the chances of certain combinations to appear face up when the dice are thrown.
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(of a product, building, etc.) including many extra features, accessories, luxuries, or the like:
verb (used with object)
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to put a load on or in; fill:
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to supply abundantly, lavishly, or excessively with something (often followed by down):
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to weigh down, burden, or oppress (often followed by down, with, on, etc.):
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to insert a charge, projectile, etc., into (a firearm).
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to place (film, tape, etc.) into a camera or other device:
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to place film, tape, etc., into (a camera or other device):
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to take on as a load:
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to add to the weight of, sometimes fraudulently:
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Insurance. to increase (the net premium) by adding charges, as for expenses.
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to add additional or prejudicial meaning to (a statement, question, etc.):
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to overcharge (a word, expression, etc.) with extraneous values of emotion, sentiment, or the like:
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to weight (dice) so that they will always come to rest with particular faces upward.
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Baseball. to have or put runners at (first, second, and third bases):
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Fine Arts.
to place a large amount of pigment on (a brush).
to apply a thick layer of pigment to (a canvas).
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Metalworking.
(of metal being deep-drawn) to become welded to (the drawing tool).
(of material being ground) to fill the depressions in the surface of (a grinding wheel).
(in powder metallurgy) to fill the cavity of (a die).
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Computers.
to bring (a program or data) into main storage from external or auxiliary storage.
to place (an input/output medium) into an appropriate device, as by inserting a disk into a disk drive.
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Electricity. to add (a power-absorbing device) to an electric circuit.
verb (used without object)
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to put on or take on a load, as of passengers or goods:
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to load a firearm.
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to enter a carrier or conveyance (usually followed by into):
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to become filled or occupied:
Origin of loaded
1655-65; 1940-45 for def 4; load + -ed2
Examples for loaded
The Ficus Platypoda was also found here, loaded with ripe fruit.
The consequent depth of green malt when loaded is over 10 inches.
Was he loaded with millet-seed on one side and honey on the other?
We now loaded with naval stores, and cleared again for Liverpool.
I realized, a bit too late, that certain words I had always known were now loaded, and therefore off limits.
Four of them carried a thick black nylon body bag, two to a side, and loaded it into the middle of the hull.
For these Arabs, Iran is the raised (and loaded) head of the snake.
Her master kept it on his table as a paper-weight, and no one knew it was loaded.
This is admittedly a loaded question, but do you feel James Earl Ray really killed Martin Luther King Jr.?
He loaded both bodies into the back of his white Toyota pickup truck.