regard

noun
/ɹɪˈɡɑːd/UK/ɹɪˈɡɑɹd/US

Etymology

From Middle English regard, regarde, reguard, from Anglo-Norman reguard, from regarder, reguarder. Attested in Middle English starting around the mid 14th century. Piecewise doublet of reward; compare also guard, ward, guardian, and so on.

  1. derived from reguard
  2. inherited from regard

Definitions

  1. A steady look, a gaze.

    • He bathed in the memory of her blondness, of her warm blue regard, and the sentiment permeated his sensibility with tenderness made the more rich because its object was someone long since dead.
  2. One's concern for another

    One's concern for another; esteem; relation, reference.

  3. A particular aspect or detail

    A particular aspect or detail; respect, sense.

    • This attempt will be made with every regard to the difficulty of the undertaking […]
    • We are spending a lot of money trying to put this mine in shape; we are anxious to comply with the wishes of your office in every regard […]
    • These problems were not traditional problems with realistic stimuli, but rather were realistic in every regard.
  4. + 8 more definitions
    1. The worth or estimation in which something or someone is held.

      • Dolph. For the Dolphin, I stand here for him: what to him from England? Exe. Scorne and defiance, sleight regard, contempt, And any thing that may not mis-become The mightie Sender, doth he prize you at.
      • He is held in great regard in Whitehall.
    2. To look at

      To look at; to observe.

      • She regarded us warily.
    3. To consider, look upon (something) in a given way etc.

      • I always regarded tabloid journalism as a social evil.
      • He regards honesty as a duty, but was regarded himself as (being) rather dangerous by the police.
      • She regarded her pets as an extension of the family.
    4. To take notice of, pay attention to.

      • If much you note him / You ſhall offend him, and extend his Paſſion, / Feed, and regard him not.
    5. To face toward.

      • Seated on a peninſula which regardeth the maine land ; ſtrong by nature, and fortified by Art : adorned heretofore with magnificent buildings ; and numbered amongſt the paradiſes of the earth, for temperate aire, and delightfull ſituation.
      • We pass’d by[…]that exceedingly beautifull scate of my Lord Pembroke, on yᵉ ascent of an hill, flank’d with wood, and reguarding the river ; and so at night to Cadenham, yᵉ mansion of Ed. Hungerford, Esq.
    6. To have to do with, to concern.

      • That argument does not regard the question.
      • My lords, the question thus proposed by your lordships to the Judges must be admitted by all persons to be a question of great importance, as it regards the administration of justice.
    7. To set store by (something), to hold (someone) in esteem

      To set store by (something), to hold (someone) in esteem; to consider to have value, to respect.

      • Ther was a Iudge in a certayne cite which feared not god nether regarded man.
    8. Filter-avoidance spelling of retard.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at regard. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01regard02steady03constant04space05otherwise06respects07respect

A definitional loop anchored at regard. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

7 hops · closes at regard

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA