agape
adjEtymology
From a- + gape. First known use by John Milton in Paradise Lost (1667).
- borrowed from ἀγάπη
Definitions
In a state of astonishment, wonder, expectation, or eager attention
In a state of astonishment, wonder, expectation, or eager attention; as with mouth hanging open.
- […] in himself was all his state, More solemn then the tedious pomp that waits On Princes, when thir rich Retinue long Of Horses led, and Grooms besmeard with Gold Dazles the croud, and sets them all agape.
- There I stand, agape like any country bumpkin
- That's all well and good; one can sit, agape, reading the copious liner notes to this or any Explorer record, but it's what's inside the jacket that counts.
Wide open.
- In the last frame, he throws back his head and wails, his mouth agape.
In a state of astonishment, wonder, expectation, or eager attention.
- Three of us--two biologists and I--were crouched behind a huge boulder at the water's edge and staring agape as the largest bear I ever saw came toward us
- "This is Sammy 91," he told the two dozen tourists watching agape."
- One features a science teacher looking agape at the camera which has caught him reading red-handed.
›+ 4 more definitionsshow fewer
Open wide.
- Its mouth yawned agape
- The bathroom door stood agape, and the peeling vinyl floor was bare.
- He glanced up into Richard's eyes, his own wide with wonder, his mouth hanging agape.
The love of God for mankind, or the benevolent love of Christians for others.
Spiritual, altruistic, beneficial love which wills good for others.
A love feast, especially one held in the early Christian Church in connection with the…
A love feast, especially one held in the early Christian Church in connection with the Eucharist.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for agape. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA