Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Heft
1.
The act or effort of heaving; violent strain or exertion.
[Obs.]
He craks his gorge, his sides,
With violent
With violent
hefts
. Shakespeare
2.
Weight; ponderousness.
[Colloq.]
A man of his age and
heft
. T. Hughes.
3.
The greater part or bulk of anything;
as, the
. heft
of the crop was spoiled[Colloq. U. S.]
J. Pickering.
Heft
,Verb.
T.
[
imp. & p. p.
Hefted
(Heft
, obs
.); p. pr. & vb. n.
Hefting
.] 1.
To heave up; to raise aloft.
Inflamed with wrath, his raging blade he
heft
. Spenser.
2.
To prove or try the weight of by raising.
[Colloq.]
Webster 1828 Edition
Heft
HEFT
, n.1.
Heaving; effort. He cracks his gorge, his sides.
With violent hefts. [Not used.]
2.
Weight; ponderousness. [This use is common in popular language in America. And we sometimes hear it used as a verb, as, to heft, to lift for the purpose of feeling or judging of the weight.]3.
A handle; a haft. [Not used.]Definition 2024
Heft
Heft
heft
heft
English
Alternative forms
Noun
heft (countable and uncountable, plural hefts)
- (uncountable) Weight.
- T. Hughes
- a man of his age and heft
- 1913, Joseph C. Lincoln, chapter 5, in Mr. Pratt's Patients:
- Of all the queer collections of humans outside of a crazy asylum, it seemed to me this sanitarium was the cup winner. […] When you're well enough off so's you don't have to fret about anything but your heft or your diseases you begin to get queer, I suppose.
- T. Hughes
- Heaviness, the feel of weight.
- A high quality hammer should have good balance and heft.
- 2014 September 7, Natalie Angier, “The Moon comes around again [print version: Revisiting a moon that still has secrets to reveal: Supermoon revives interest in its violent origins and hidden face, International New York Times, 10 September 2014, p. 8]”, in The New York Times:
- Unlike most moons of the solar system, ours has the heft, the gravitational gravitas, to pull itself into a sphere.
- (Northern England) A piece of mountain pasture to which a farm animal has become hefted (accustomed).
- An animal that has become hefted thus.
- (West of Ireland) Poor condition in sheep caused by mineral deficiency.
- The act or effort of heaving; violent strain or exertion.
- William Shakespeare
- He cracks his gorge, his sides, / With violent hefts.
- William Shakespeare
- (US, dated, colloquial) The greater part or bulk of anything.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of J. Pickering to this entry?)
- The heft of the crop was spoiled.
Derived terms
Translations
weight
Verb
heft (third-person singular simple present hefts, present participle hefting, simple past and past participle hefted)
- (transitive) To lift up; especially, to lift something heavy.
- He hefted the sack of concrete into the truck.
- (transitive) To test the weight of something by lifting it.
- (transitive, Northern England and Scotland) (of a farm animal, especially a flock of sheep) To become accustomed and attached to an area of mountain pasture.
- (obsolete) past participle of to heave.
Synonyms
- (to lift up): hoist
Translations
to lift
Etymology 2
From German Heft (“notebook”).
Noun
heft (plural hefts)
- A number of sheets of paper fastened together, as for a notebook.
- A part of a serial publication.
- The Nation
- The size of hefts will depend on the material requiring attention, and the annual volume is to cost about 15 marks.
- The Nation
Dutch
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɛft
Noun
heft n (plural heften, diminutive heftje n)
- handle of a knife or other tool, haft, hilt
- (metaphor, used absolutely: het heft) control, charge
- Zij heeft het heft in handen hier
- She's the one that runs the show here.
Verb
heft
- second- and third-person singular present indicative of heffen
- (archaic) plural imperative of heffen
Kurdish
Etymology
From Proto-Iranian, from Proto-Indo-Iranian, from Proto-Indo-European *septḿ̥. Compare Avestan [script needed] (hapta), Persian هفت (haft), Ossetian авд (avd), Pashto اووه (uwə).
Numeral
heft
- (cardinal) seven
Scots
Etymology
Noun
heft
- A piece of mountain pasture to which a farm animal has become hefted.
- An animal that has become hefted thus.
Verb
heft (third-person singular present hefts, present participle heftin, past heftit, past participle heftit)
- (transitive) The process by which a farm animal becomes accustomed to an area of mountain pasture.