stargaze
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈstɑɹɡeɪz/
Verb
[edit]stargaze (third-person singular simple present stargazes, present participle stargazing, simple past and past participle stargazed)
- To look at the stars at night.
- It was a very clear night so I paused to stargaze until I got cold and went in.
- 1903, Burt L. Standish [pseudonym; Gilbert Patten], Frank Merriwell at Yale[1]:
- "That's right," declared Browning's companion. "I was out stargazing last night. Looked at the Long-Handled Dipper a long time, and it gave me an awful thirst. I've had it with me all day. Yes, mine's ale."
- (figuratively) To gaze engrossed with emotion or contemplatively.
- 1912, Mary Antin, The Promised Land[2]:
- Before books came into my life, I was given to stargazing and daydreaming. When books were given me, I fell upon them as a glutton pounces on his meat after a period of enforced starvation.
Translations
[edit]to look at the stars at night
Further reading
[edit]- “stargaze”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.