Found 3 items, similar to Grayest.
English → Indonesian (quick)
Definition: gray
abu-abu, dauk
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: gray
gray
adj 1: an achromatic color of any lightness between the extremes of
black and white; 
“gray flannel suit”; 
“hair just
turning gray” [syn: 
grey, 
grayish, 
greyish]
2: showing characteristics of age, especially having gray or
white hair; 
“whose beard with age is hoar”-Coleridge;
“nodded his hoary head” [syn: 
grey, 
gray-haired, 
grey-haired,
gray-headed, 
grey-headed, 
grizzly, 
hoar, 
hoary,
white-haired]
3: darkened with overcast; 
“a dark day”; 
“a dull sky”; 
“a gray
rainy afternoon”; 
“gray clouds”; 
“the sky was leaden and
thick” [syn: 
dull, 
grey, 
leaden]
4: used to signify the Confederate forces in the Civil War (who
wore gray uniforms); 
“a stalwart gray figure” [syn: 
grey]
5: intermediate in character or position; 
“a gray area between
clearly legal and strictly illegal” [syn: 
grey]
gray
v 1: make gray; 
“The painter decided to grey the sky” [syn: 
grey]
2: turn gray; 
“Her hair began to gray” [syn: 
grey]
gray
n 1: a neutral achromatic color midway between white and black
[syn: 
grayness, 
grey, 
greyness]
2: gray clothing; 
“he was dressed in gray” [syn: 
grey]
3: any organization or party whose uniforms or badges are gray;
“the Confederate army was a vast gray” [syn: 
grey]
4: horse of a light grey or whitish color
5: English poet best known for his elegy written in a country
church-yard (1716-1771) [syn: 
Thomas Gray]
6: American navigator who twice circumnavigated the globe and
who discovered the Columbia River (1755-1806) [syn: 
Robert Gray
]
7: United States botanist who specialized in North American
flora and who was an early supporter of Darwin's theories
of evolution (1810-1888) [syn: 
Asa Gray]
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Grayest
Gray 
\Gray\ (gr[=a]), a. [Compar. 
Grayer; superl. 
Grayest.]
[OE. gray, grey, AS. gr[=ae]g, gr[=e]g; akin to D. graauw,
OHG. gr[=a]o, G. grau, Dan. graa, Sw. gr[*a], Icel. gr[=a]r.]
[Written also 
grey.]
1. any color of neutral hue between white and black; white
mixed with black, as the color of pepper and salt, or of
ashes, or of hair whitened by age; sometimes, a dark mixed
color; as, the soft gray eye of a dove.
[1913 Webster]
These gray and dun colors may be also produced by
mixing whites and blacks. --Sir I.
Newton.
[1913 Webster]
2. Gray-haired; gray-headed; of a gray color; hoary.
[1913 Webster]
3. Old; mature; as, gray experience. -- Ames.
[1913 Webster]
4. gloomy; dismal.
[PJC]
Gray antimony (Min.), stibnite.
Gray buck (Zo["o]l.), the chickara.
Gray cobalt (Min.), smaltite.
Gray copper (Min.), tetrahedrite.
Gray duck (Zo["o]l.), the gadwall; also applied to the
female mallard.
Gray falcon (Zo["o]l.) the peregrine falcon.
Gray Friar. See 
Franciscan, and 
Friar.
Gray hen (Zo["o]l.), the female of the blackcock or black
grouse. See 
Heath grouse.
Gray mill or 
Gray millet (Bot.), a name of several plants
of the genus 
Lithospermum; gromwell.
Gray mullet (Zo["o]l.) any one of the numerous species of
the genus 
Mugil, or family 
Mugilid[ae], found both in
the Old World and America; as the European species
(
Mugilid[ae] capito, and 
Mugilid[ae] auratus), the
American striped mullet (
Mugilid[ae] albula), and the
white or silver mullet (
Mugilid[ae] Braziliensis). See
Mullet.
Gray owl (Zo["o]l.), the European tawny or brown owl
(
Syrnium aluco). The great gray owl (
Ulula cinerea)
inhabits arctic America.
Gray parrot (Zo["o]l.), an African parrot (
Psittacus erithacus
), very commonly domesticated, and noted for its
aptness in learning to talk. Also called 
jako.
Gray pike. (Zo["o]l.) See 
Sauger.
Gray snapper (Zo["o]l.), a Florida fish; the sea lawyer.
See 
Snapper.
Gray snipe (Zo["o]l.), the dowitcher in winter plumage.
Gray whale (Zo["o]l.), a rather large and swift whale of
the northern Pacific (
Eschrichtius robustus, formerly
Rhachianectes glaucus), having short jaws and no dorsal
fin. It grows to a length of 50 feet (someimes 60 feet).
It was formerly taken in large numbers in the bays of
California, and is now rare; -- called also 
grayback,
devilfish, and 
hardhead. It lives up to 50 or 60 years
and adults weigh from 20 to 40 tons.
[1913 Webster]