4 results for: to a fault
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| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) | Cite This Source |
fault
Audio Help [fawlt] Pronunciation Key
Audio Help [fawlt] Pronunciation Key –noun
–verb (used without object)
–verb (used with object)
—Idioms
| 1. | a defect or imperfection; flaw; failing: a fault in the brakes; a fault in one's character. |
| 2. | responsibility for failure or a wrongful act: It is my fault that we have not finished. |
| 3. | an error or mistake: a fault in addition. |
| 4. | a misdeed or transgression: to confess one's faults. |
| 5. | Sports. (in tennis, handball, etc.)
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| 6. | Geology, Mining. a break in the continuity of a body of rock or of a vein, with dislocation along the plane of the fracture (fault plane). |
| 7. | Manège. (of a horse jumping in a show) any of a number of improper executions in negotiating a jump, as a tick, knockdown, refusal, or run-out. |
| 8. | Electricity. a partial or total local failure in the insulation or continuity of a conductor or in the functioning of an electric system. |
| 9. | Hunting. a break in the line of scent; a losing of the scent; check. |
| 10. | Obsolete. lack; want. |
| 11. | to commit a fault; blunder; err. |
| 12. | Geology. to undergo faulting. |
| 13. | Geology. to cause a fault in. |
| 14. | to find fault with, blame, or censure. |
| 15. | at fault,
|
| 16. | find fault, to seek and make known defects or flaws; complain; criticize: He constantly found fault with my behavior. |
| 17. | to a fault, to an extreme degree; excessively: She was generous to a fault. |
[Origin: 1250–1300; ME faute < AF, MF < VL *fallita, n. use of fem. of *fallitus, for L falsus, ptp. of fallere to be wrong
]
] —Synonyms 1. blemish; frailty, shortcoming. Fault, failing, foible, weakness, vice imply shortcomings or imperfections in a person. Fault is the common word used to refer to any of the average shortcomings of a person; when it is used, condemnation is not necessarily implied: Of his many faults the greatest is vanity. Foible, failing, weakness all tend to excuse the person referred to. Of these foible is the mildest, suggesting a weak point that is slight and often amusing, manifesting itself in eccentricity rather than in wrongdoing: the foibles of artists. Weakness suggests that the person in question is unable to control a particular impulse, and gives way to self-indulgence: a weakness for pretty women. Failing is closely akin to fault, except that it is particularly applied to humanity at large, suggesting common, often venial, shortcomings: Procrastination and making excuses are common failings. Vice (which may also apply to a sin in itself, apart from a person: the vice of gambling) is the strongest term, and designates a habit that is truly detrimental or evil.
—Antonyms 1. virtue, strength, merit.
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
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