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sweep

Syllabification: (sweep)
Pronunciation: /swēp/

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

verb (sweeps, sweeping; past and past participle swept /swept/)

  • 1 [with object] clean (an area) by brushing away dirt or litter:I’ve swept the floor Greg swept out the kitchen
  • move or remove (dirt or litter) by sweeping:she swept the tea leaves into a dustpan
  • move or push (someone or something) with great force:I was swept along by the crowd
  • brush (hair) back from one’s face or upward:long hair swept up into a high chignon
  • search (an area) for something:the detective swept the room for hair and fingerprints
  • examine (a place or thing) for electronic listening devices:the line is swept every fifteen minutes
  • cover (an entire area) with a gun:they were trying to get the Lewis gun up behind some trees from where they would sweep the trench
  • 2 [no object] move swiftly and smoothly:a large black car swept past the open windows figurativea wave of sympathy swept over him
  • [with object] cause to move swiftly and smoothly:he swept his hand around the room
  • (of a person) move in a confident and stately manner:she swept magnificently from the hall
  • (of a geographical or natural feature) extend continuously in a particular direction, especially in a curve:green forests swept down the hillsides
  • affect (an area or place) swiftly and widely:the rebellion had swept through all four of the country’s provinces [with object]:violence swept the country
  • [with object] win all the games in (a series); take each of the winning or main places in (a contest or event):we knew we had to sweep these three home games

noun

  • 1an act of sweeping something with a brush:I was giving the floor a quick sweep
  • short for chimney sweep.
  • 2a long, swift, curving movement:a grandiose sweep of his hand
  • Electronics the movement of a beam across the screen of a cathode ray tube.
  • 3a comprehensive search or survey of a place or area:the police finished their sweep through the woods
  • (often sweeps) a survey of the ratings of broadcast stations, carried out at regular intervals to determine advertising rates.
  • 4a long, typically curved stretch of road, river, country, etc.:we could see a wide sweep of country perhaps a hundred miles across
  • a curved part of a driveway in front of a building:one fork of the driveway continued on to the gravel sweep
  • the range or scope of something:the whole sweep of the history of the USSR
  • 5 informal a sweepstake.
  • 6an instance of winning every event, award, or place in a contest:a World Series sweep
  • 7a long heavy oar used to row a barge or other vessel: [as modifier]:a big, heavy sweep oar
  • 8a sail of a windmill.
  • 9a long pole mounted as a lever for raising buckets from a well.

Phrases

a clean sweep

see clean.

sweep the board (or boards)

win every event or prize in a contest.

sweep someone off their feet

see foot.

sweep something under the rug (or carpet)

conceal or ignore a problem or difficulty in the hope that it will be forgotten.

Phrasal Verbs

sweep something away (or aside)

remove, dispel, or abolish something in a swift and sudden way:Nahum’s smile swept away the air of apprehensive gloom

Origin:

Old English swāpan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to German schweifen 'sweep in a curve'

sweep in other Oxford dictionaries

Definition of sweep in the British & World English dictionary