widely
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
wide/wʌɪd/
▶adjective (wider, widest)
- 1 of great or more than average width.
■ (after a measurement and in questions) from side to side.
■ open to the full extent: wide eyes.
- 2 including a great variety of people or things.
■ spread among a large number or over a large area: wider share ownership.
■ considering or dealing with the more general aspects of a situation, issue, etc.
■ [in combination] extending over the whole of: industry-wide.
- 3 at a considerable or specified distance from a point or mark.
■ (especially in football) at or near the side of the field.
- 1 to the full extent.
- 2 far from a particular point or mark.
■ (especially in football) at or near the side of the field.
– phrases
wide awake fully awake.
wide of the mark a long way from an intended target.
wide awake fully awake.
wide of the mark a long way from an intended target.
■ inaccurate.
wide open- 1 (of a contest) of which the outcome is not predictable.
- 2 vulnerable to attack.
– derivatives
widely adverb,
wideness noun,
widish adjective.
widely adverb,
wideness noun,
widish adjective.
– origin OE wīd ‘spacious, extensive’, wīde ‘over a large area’, of Gmc origin.
'widely' also found in these Oxford entries:
abroad
- alsike
- apocryphal
- arabica
- Authorized Version
- BASIC
- bat
- beg
- black
- blackcurrant
- black swan
- bloody
- bougainvillea
- bruit
- callaloo
- Chenin
- cochineal
- controversy
- cornbrash
- cucumber
- custom
- dandelion
- data
- decade
- die
- disperse
- disseminate
- diverse
- divulge
- dollar
- edible snail
- Eskimo
- everywhere
- far-flung
- felucca
- forage
- forkball
- Fula
- gape
- generalize
- generally
- globetrotter
- goji berry
- Golden Delicious
- golden orfe
- goosegrass
- guppy
- heathen
- Highland cattle
- Hindustani

