here
Plural: heres
Noun
- This place, position, or point.
- the present location; this place
- "where do we go from here?"
- queen of the Olympian gods in ancient Greek mythology; sister and wife of Zeus remembered for her jealously of the many mortal women Zeus fell in love with; identified with Roman Juno
- This place; this location.
- This place; this location.
- This point or stage in time, conceptualised as a location.
- This time, the present situation.
Adjective Satellite
- being here now
- "is everyone here?"
Adverb
- in or at this place; where the speaker or writer is
- "I work here"
- "turn here"
- "radio waves received here on Earth"
- in this circumstance or respect or on this point or detail
- "what do we have here?"
- "here I must disagree"
- to this place (especially toward the speaker)
- "come here, please"
- at this time; now
- "we'll adjourn here for lunch and discuss the remaining issues this afternoon"
Adv
- In, on, or at this place (a place perceived to be close to the speaker); compare there.
- In, on, or at this place (a place perceived to be close to the speaker); compare there.
- At this point or stage (in a process, argument, narration, etc.)
- In, on, or at this place (a place perceived to be close to the speaker); compare there.
- In this matter.
- In, on, or at this place (a place perceived to be close to the speaker); compare there.
- Notionally at the speaker's location by virtue of happening now.
- In, on, or at this place (a place perceived to be close to the speaker); compare there.
- In this context.
- In, on, or at this place (a place perceived to be close to the speaker); compare there.
- After the name of a person perceived as located close to the speaker, used familiarly to indicate that person.
- In, on, or at this place (a place perceived to be close to the speaker); compare there.
- After certain determiners, especially 'this' and 'these', used to emphasise demonstrative sense; see also this here.
- To this place; used in place of the literary or archaic hither.
Adj
- Alive
Intj
- Used semi-assertively to offer something to the listener.
- Used for emphasis at the beginning of a sentence when expressing an opinion or want.
- Used to attract someone's attention, often in a hostile way.
- Said in response to one's name being called during a roll call, indicating that one is present.
- Said to command a person or higher animal to come to the speaker.
Examples
- "Fido! Here!" — "Woof Woof!"
- An Alzheimer patient's here may in his mind be anywhere he called home in the time he presently re-lives.
- Both 'ere buckets 'ave 'oles in 'em.
- Christmas will soon be here.
- Derivatives can refer to anything that is derived from something else, but here they refer specifically to functions that give the slope of the tangent line to a curve.
- Flu season is here.
- Here endeth the lesson.
- Here I stand.
- Here is the report that you asked for.
- Here is where I met my spouse twelve years ago.
- Here! You! Stop doing that!
- Here, I'm tired and I want a drink.
- Here, now I'm giving it to you.
- I'd like to continue my story, but here is where I must stop.
- I'm not dead yet! I'm still here!
- I've done as much as I can; you'll have to take it from here.
- I've had enough of peeling potatoes. I'm stopping here.
- It says here that he died in 1970.
- Jim here has been with the company for twenty years.
- Kilroy was here.
- Ms. Doe is not here at the moment.
- Please come here.
- Smith ... Here! ... Jones ... Here! ... Walters ... ... Anyone seen Walters?
- The air here is foul.
- The blank tile landed right HERE, begging for a high-scoring letter.
- The view up here is better than the view down there!
- This here orange is too sour.
- You say that all men are born equal, but here I must disagree with you.
- You wait here while I fetch my coat.
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English her, from Old English hēr (“at this place”), from Proto-West Germanic *hēr, from Proto-Germanic *hē₂r, from *hiz + *-r, from Proto-Indo-European *kís, from *ḱe + *ís.
Cognates
Cognate with Saterland Frisian hier, West Frisian hjir, Dutch hier, German Low German hier, German hier, Danish her, Swedish här, Norwegian her, Faroese her, Icelandic hér. Also related to the English pronoun he (“this/that person”), and the words hither (“to this place”) and hence (“from this place”).
Synonyms
Hera, hither, right here
Antonyms
Scrabble Score: 7
here: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordhere: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
here: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary