heart – WordReference.com Dictionary of English
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Anatomy
a hollow, pumplike organ of blood circulation, composed mainly of rhythmically contractile smooth muscle, located in the chest between the lungs and slightly to the left and consisting of four chambers: a right atrium that receives blood returning from the body via the superior and inferior vena cavae, a right ventricle that pumps the blood through the pulmonary artery to the lungs for oxygenation, a left atrium that receives the oxygenated blood via the pulmonary veins and passes it through the mitral valve, and a left ventricle that pumps the oxygenated blood, via the aorta, throughout the body.
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Zoology
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the homologous structure in other vertebrates, consisting of four chambers in mammals and birds and three chambers in reptiles and amphibians.
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the analogous contractile structure in invertebrate animals, as the tubular heart of the spider and earthworm.
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the center of the total personality, esp. with reference to intuition, feeling, or emotion:
In your heart you know I’m an honest man.
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the center of emotion, esp. as contrasted to the head as the center of the intellect:
His head told him not to fall in love, but his heart had the final say.
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capacity for sympathy;
feeling;
affection:His heart moved him to help the needy.
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spirit, courage, or enthusiasm:
His heart sank when he walked into the room and saw their gloomy faces.
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the innermost or central part of anything:
Notre Dame stands in the very heart of Paris.
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the vital or essential part;
core:the heart of the matter.
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the breast or bosom:
to clasp a person to one’s heart.
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a person (used esp. in expressions of praise or affection):
dear heart.
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a conventional shape with rounded sides meeting in a point at the bottom and curving inward to a cusp at the top.
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Games
a red figure or pip of this shape on a playing card.
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Games
a card of the suit bearing such figures.
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Games
hearts:
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(used with a sing. or pl. v.) the suit so marked:
Hearts is trump. Hearts are trump.
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(used with a sing. v.) a game in which the players try to avoid taking tricks containing this suit.
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Botany
the core of a tree;
the solid central part without sap or albumen. -
Genetics
good condition for production, growth, etc., as of land or crops.
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Textiles
Also called core.
[
Ropemaking.
]
a strand running through the center of a rope, the other strands being laid around it.
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Idioms
after one’s own heart, in keeping with one’s taste or preference:
There’s a man after my own heart!
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Idioms
at heart, in reality;
fundamentally;
basically:At heart she is a romantic.
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Idioms
break someone’s heart, to cause someone great disappointment or sorrow, as to disappoint in love:
The news that their son had been arrested broke their hearts.
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Idioms
by heart, by memory;
word-for-word:They knew the song by heart.
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Idioms
cross one’s heart, to maintain the truth of one’s statement;
affirm one’s integrity:That’s exactly what they told me, I cross my heart!
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Idioms
do someone’s heart good, to give happiness or pleasure to;
delight:It does my heart good to see you again.
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Idioms
eat one’s heart out, to have sorrow or longing dominate one’s emotions;
grieve inconsolably:The children are eating their hearts out over their lost dog.
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Idioms
from the bottom of one’s heart, with complete sincerity. Also, from one’s heart, from the heart.
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Idioms
have a heart, to be compassionate or merciful:
Please have a heart and give her another chance.
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Idioms
have at heart, to have as an object, aim, or desire:
to have another’s best interests at heart.
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Idioms
have one’s heart in one’s mouth, to be very anxious or fearful:
He wanted to do the courageous thing, but his heart was in his mouth.
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Idioms
have one’s heart in the right place, to be fundamentally kind, generous, or well-intentioned:
The old gentleman may have a stern manner, but his heart is in the right place.
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Idioms
heart and soul, enthusiastically;
fervently;
completely:They entered heart and soul into the spirit of the holiday.
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Idioms
in one’s heart of hearts, in one’s private thoughts or feelings;
deep within one:He knew, in his heart of hearts, that the news would be bad.
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Idioms
lose one’s heart to, to fall in love with:
He lost his heart to the prima ballerina.
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Idioms
near one’s heart, of great interest or concern to one:
It is a cause that is very near his heart.
Also, close to one’s heart.
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Idioms
not have the heart, to lack the necessary courage or callousness to do something:
No one had the heart to tell him he was through as an actor.
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Idioms
set one’s heart against, to be unalterably opposed to:
She had set her heart against selling the statue.
Also, have one’s heart set against.
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Idioms
set one’s heart at rest, to dismiss one’s anxieties:
She couldn’t set her heart at rest until she knew he had returned safely.
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Idioms
set one’s heart on, to wish for intensely;
determine on:She has set her heart on going to Europe after graduation.
Also, have one’s heart set on.
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Idioms
take heart, to regain one’s courage;
become heartened:Her son’s death was a great blow, but she eventually took heart, convinced that God had willed it.
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Idioms
take or lay to heart:
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to think seriously about;
concern oneself with:He took to heart his father’s advice.
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to be deeply affected by;
grieve over:She was prone to take criticism too much to heart.
or
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Idioms
to one’s heart’s content, until one is satisfied;
as much or as long as one wishes:The children played in the snow to their heart’s content.
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Idioms
wear one’s heart on one’s sleeve:
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to make one’s intimate feelings or personal affairs known to all:
She was not the kind who would wear her heart on her sleeve.
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to be liable to fall in love;
fall in love easily:How lovely to be young and wear our hearts on our sleeves!
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Idioms
with all one’s heart:
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with earnestness or zeal.
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with willingness;
cordially:She welcomed the visitors with all her heart.
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heart
USA pronunciation
n.