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Can   /kæn/  /kən/   Listen
verb
Can  v. t. & v. i.  (past & past part. could)  (The transitive use is obsolete)
1.
To know; to understand. (Obs.) "I can rimes of Robin Hood." "I can no Latin, quod she." "Let the priest in surplice white, That defunctive music can."
2.
To be able to do; to have power or influence. (Obs.) "The will of Him who all things can." "For what, alas, can these my single arms?" "Maecaenas and Agrippa, who can most with Caesar."
3.
To be able; followed by an infinitive without to; as, I can go, but do not wish to.
Synonyms: Can but, Can not but. It is an error to use the former of these phrases where the sens requires the latter. If we say, "I can but perish if I go," "But" means only, and denotes that this is all or the worst that can happen. When the apostle Peter said. "We can not but speak of the things which we have seen and heard." he referred to a moral constraint or necessety which rested upon him and his associates; and the meaning was, We cannot help speaking, We cannot refrain from speaking. This idea of a moral necessity or constraint is of frequent occurrence, and is also expressed in the phrase, "I can not help it." Thus we say. "I can not but hope," "I can not but believe," "I can not but think," "I can not but remark," etc., in cases in which it would be an error to use the phrase can but. "Yet he could not but acknowledge to himself that there was something calculated to impress awe,... in the sudden appearances and vanishings... of the masque" "Tom felt that this was a rebuff for him, and could not but understand it as a left-handed hit at his employer."



Can  v. t.  (past & past part. canned; pres. part. canning)  To preserve by putting in sealed cans (U. S.) "Canned meats"
Canned goods, a general name for fruit, vegetables, meat, or fish, preserved in hermetically sealed cans.



Can  v.  An obs. form of began, imp. & p. p. of Begin, sometimes used in old poetry. Note: (See Gan.) "With gentle words he can faile gree."



noun
Can  n.  
1.
A drinking cup; a vessel for holding liquids. "Fill the cup and fill can, Have a rouse before the morn."
2.
A vessel or case of tinned iron or of sheet metal, of various forms, but usually cylindrical; as, a can of tomatoes; an oil can; a milk can. Note: A can may be a cylinder open at the top, as for receiving the sliver from a carding machine, or with a removable cover or stopper, as for holding tea, spices, milk, oysters, etc., or with handle and spout, as for holding oil, or hermetically sealed, in canning meats, fruits, etc. The name is also sometimes given to the small glass or earthenware jar used in canning.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Can" Quotes from Famous Books



... a letter saying those words, which I can show to my sweetheart when he asks how I got the money?" inquired ...
— The Woman in White • Wilkie Collins

... is His lovely Will towards thee. But first always do thy part, and until thou doest thy part I cannot begin mine, for thou couldst receive neither blessings nor blisses did I not receive them first from Him and hand them on to thee; so each are dependent the one on the other, and only together can we enter paradise. Think not I do not suffer as much as thyself and far more. I know thou dost suffer with thy body and with the losses of thine earthly loves, but I suffer far more with the loss of my Heavenly ...
— The Romance of the Soul • Lilian Staveley

... friend sincerely, and wept bitterly when she saw the worn volumes he had bequeathed to her. The cross she fastened round her neck on a thin gold chain, and this badge of a sacred order rested for many years on the heart of the strange, evil woman. You can see the tiny line of this chain in the few known portraits of Wilhelmine von Graevenitz. These pictures are very rare, Time and Hatred have hidden them but too well. Indeed, it is as though all the Swabian virtue had conspired together ...
— A German Pompadour - Being the Extraordinary History of Wilhelmine van Graevenitz, - Landhofmeisterin of Wirtemberg • Marie Hay

... the affairs of McComas, I naturally had a lesser knowledge. They were more numerous and more complicated; nor was I close to them. I can only say that they went on prosperously, and continued to go on prosperously: their success ...
— On the Stairs • Henry B. Fuller

... to be a man," she went on, "a man and a hobo." The furrow vanished and the eyes suddenly went dancing. "That is what I should like to be—a hobo with a tomato-can and a fire beside ...
— The Lighted Match • Charles Neville Buck


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