tall
Plural: talls
Noun
- a garment size for a tall person
- Someone or something that is tall.
- A clothing size for taller people.
- A tall serving of a drink, especially one from Starbucks, which contains 12 ounces.
Adjective
- Having a great or specified height.
- great in vertical dimension; high in stature
- "tall people"
- "tall buildings"
- "tall trees"
- "tall ships"
Adjective Satellite
- lofty in style
- "he engages in so much tall talk, one never really realizes what he is saying"
- impressively difficult
- "a tall order"
- too improbable to admit of belief
- "a tall story"
Adj
- Having a vertical extent greater than the average. For example, somebody with a height of over 6 feet would generally be considered to be tall.
- Having its top a long way up; having a great vertical (and often greater than horizontal) extent.
- Hard to believe, such as a tall story or a tall tale.
- Smaller than grande, usually 8 ounces (~ 230 ml).
- Obsequious; obedient.
- Seemly; suitable; fitting, becoming, comely; attractive, handsome.
- Bold; brave; courageous; valiant.
- Fine; proper; admirable; great; excellent.
Examples
- Being tall is an advantage in basketball.
- Do you have this in a tall?
- Tall trees, at least about 30m high.
- That triple-word score bonus created a TALL stack of points for her.
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English tall, talle, tal (“seemly, becoming, handsome, good-looking, excellent, good, valiant, lively in speech, bold, great, large, big”), from Old English *tæl, ġetæl (“swift, ready, having mastery of”), from Proto-Germanic *talaz (“submissive, pliable, obedient”), from Proto-Indo-European *dol-, *del- (“to aim, calculate, adjust, reckon”).
Cognate with Scots tal (“high, lofty, tall”), Old Frisian tel (“swift”), Old Saxon gital (“quick”), Old High German gizal (“active, agile”), Gothic 𐌿𐌽𐍄𐌰𐌻𐍃 (untals, “indocile, disobedient”).
The Oxford English Dictionary notes: "The sense development [of tall] is remarkable, but is paralleled more or less by that of other adjectives expressing estimation, such as buxom, canny, clean, clever, cunning, deft, elegant, handsome, pretty, proper; German klein, as compared with English clean, presents the antithesis to modern tall as compared to tall in early Middle English. It has been conjectured that in the sense 'high of stature' it is a different word, adopted from the Welsh tal in some sense; but the latter is, according to Professor Rhŷs, merely a 16th-century borrowing of the English word (in Owen Pughe's Dictionary erroneously mixed up with the genuine Welsh word tal (“end, brow, forehead”), with which it has no possible connection.)"
Synonyms
grandiloquent, improbable, magniloquent, marvellous, marvelous, elevated, eminent, exalted, high, lofty, tall
Scrabble Score: 4
tall: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordtall: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
tall: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary