Dictionary: great
(grāt)
adj., great·er, great·est.
(grāt)

adj., great·er, great·est.
- Very large in size.
- Larger in size than others of the same kind.
- Large in quantity or number: A great throng awaited us. See synonyms at large.
- Extensive in time or distance: a great delay.
- Remarkable or outstanding in magnitude, degree, or extent: a great crisis.
- Of outstanding significance or importance: a great work of art.
- Chief or principal: the great house on the estate.
- Superior in quality or character; noble: “For he was great, ere fortune made him so” (John Dryden).
- Powerful; influential: one of the great nations of the West.
- Eminent; distinguished: a great leader.
- Grand; aristocratic.
- Informal. Enthusiastic: a great lover of music.
- Informal. Very skillful: great at algebra.
- Informal. Very good; first-rate: We had a great time at the dance.
- Being one generation removed from the relative specified. Often used in combination: a great-granddaughter.
- Archaic. Pregnant.