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anchor

Syllabification: (an·chor)
Pronunciation: /ˈaNGkər/

Translate anchor | into French | into German | into Italian | into Spanish
Definition of anchor

noun

  • 1a heavy object attached to a rope or chain and used to moor a vessel to the sea bottom, typically one having a metal shank with a ring at one end for the rope and a pair of curved and/or barbed flukes at the other.
  • a person or thing that provides stability or confidence in an otherwise uncertain situation:the European Community is the economic anchor of the New Europe
  • (in full anchor store) a store, e.g., a department store, that is the principal tenant of a mall or a shopping center.
  • 2an anchorman or anchorwoman, especially in broadcasting or athletics:he signed off after nineteen years as CBS news anchor

verb

[with object]
  • 1moor (a ship) to the sea bottom with an anchor:the ship was anchored in the lee of the island [no object]:we anchored in the harbor
  • secure firmly in position:with cords and pitons they anchored him to the rock the tail is used as a hook with which the fish anchors itself to coral figurativethe first baseman is anchored to the bag
  • provide with a firm basis or foundation:it is important that policy be anchored to some acceptable theoretical basis
  • 2act as an anchor for (a television program or sporting event):she anchored a television documentary series in the early 1980s

Phrases

at anchor

(of a ship) moored by means of an anchor.

drop anchor

(of a ship) let down the anchor and moor.

weigh (or raise or heave) anchor

(of a ship) take up the anchor when ready to depart.

Origin:

Old English ancor, ancra, via Latin from Greek ankura; reinforced in Middle English by Old French ancre. The current form is from anchora, an erroneous Latin spelling. The verb (from Old French ancrer) dates from Middle English

anchor in other Oxford dictionaries

Definition of anchor in the British & World English dictionary