Definition of Sending in English :

Define Sending in English

Sending meaning in English

Meaning of Sending in English

Pronunciation of Sending in English

Sending pronunciation in English

Pronounce Sending in English

Sending

see synonyms of sending

Noun

1. sending

the act of causing something to go (especially messages)

WordNet Lexical Database for English. Princeton University. 2010.


Sending

see synonyms of sending
verbWord forms: scends, scending, scended, sends, sending or sent (intransitive)
1. 
(of a vessel) to surge upwards in a heavy sea
noun
2. 
the upward heaving of a vessel pitching
3. 
the forward lift given a vessel by the sea

Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers


Sending

see synonyms of sending
noun
1. 
the upward heaving of a ship
verb intransitive
2. 
to be heaved upward, as by a wave
said of a ship

Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.


Sending

see synonyms of sending
v. sent (sĕnt), send·ing, sends
v.tr.
1. To cause to be conveyed by an intermediary to a destination: send goods by plane.
2. To dispatch, as by a communications medium: send a message by radio.
3.
a. To direct to go on a mission: sent troops into the Middle East.
b. To require or enable to go: sent her children to college.
c. To direct (a person) to a source of information; refer: sent the student to the reference section of the library.
4.
a. To give off (heat, for example); emit or issue: a stove that sends forth great warmth.
b. To utter or otherwise emit (sound): sent forth a cry of pain.
5. To hit so as to direct or propel with force; drive: The batter sent the ball to left field. The slap on my back sent me staggering.
6. To cause to take place or occur: We will meet whatever vicissitudes fate may send.
7.
a. To put or drive into a given state or condition: horrifying news that sent them into a panic.
b. Slang To transport with delight; carry away: That music really sends me.
v.intr.
1. To dispatch someone to do an errand or convey a message: Let's send out for hamburgers.
2. To dispatch a request or order, especially by mail: send away for a new catalogue.
3. To transmit a message or messages: The radio operator was still sending when the ship went down.
v. & n.
Nautical
Variant of scend.
intr.v. scend·ed, scend·ing, scends also send·ed or send·ing or sends
To heave upward on a wave or swell.
n.
The rising movement of a ship on a wave or swell.

The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition copyright ©2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.