mold
mold /məʊld $ moʊld/
mould , mold /məʊld $ moʊld/ noun
mould , mold verb
فرم دادن، قالب گرفتن، فرم ریختگی، فرم، الگو، قارچ انگلی گیاهان، کپک قارچی، کپرک زدن، کالبد، با قالب بشکل دراوردن، علوم مهندسی: فرم پرسی، عمران: قالب ریخته گری، روانشناسی: قالب ریزی کردن، علوم هوایی: شابلون
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Synonyms & Related Words mold[noun]Synonyms: type, cast, character, class, description, kind, lot, nature, sort, stamp
[verb]Synonyms: make, build, construct, erect, fashion, forge, form, frame, put together, shape
[TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English Dictionary I. mold /məʊld $ moʊld/
the American spelling of
mould [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. mould1 British English,
mold American English /məʊld $ moʊld/
noun1. SHAPED CONTAINER [countable] a hollow container that you pour a liquid or soft substance into, so that when it becomes solid, it takes the shape of the container:
Another method, used especially for figures, was to pour the clay into a mould. lime jell-o in a mould2. TYPE OF PERSON [singular] if someone is in a particular mould, or fits into a particular mould, they have all the attitudes and qualities typical of a type of person
fit (into) a mould She didn’t quite fit into the standard ‘high-flying businesswoman’ mould.in the same mould (as somebody/something)/in the mould of somebody/something a socialist intellectual in the mould of Anthony Crossland3. break the mould to change a situation completely, by doing something that has not been done before:
an attempt to break the mould of British politics4. GROWING SUBSTANCE [uncountable] a soft green, grey, or black substance that grows on food which has been kept too long, and on objects that are in warm wet air ⇒
mouldy:
The chemical was used to kill a mold that grows on peanuts. The walls were black with mould. ⇒
leaf mould [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
III. mould2 British English,
mold American English verb1. [transitive] to shape a soft substance by pressing or rolling it or by putting it into a mould
mould something into something Mould the sausage meat into little balls. moulded plastic chairs2. [transitive] to influence the way someone’s character or attitudes develop
mould something/somebody into something I try to take young athletes and mold them into team players. an attempt to mold public opinion3. [intransitive and transitive] to fit closely to the shape of something, or to make something fit closely
mould (something) to something The lining of the boot molds itself to the shape of your foot. Her wet dress was moulded to her body. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Collocations