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Grace   /greɪs/   Listen
noun
Grace  n.  
1.
The exercise of love, kindness, mercy, favor; disposition to benefit or serve another; favor bestowed or privilege conferred. "To bow and sue for grace With suppliant knee."
2.
(Theol.) The divine favor toward man; the mercy of God, as distinguished from His justice; also, any benefits His mercy imparts; divine love or pardon; a state of acceptance with God; enjoyment of the divine favor. "And if by grace, then is it no more of works." "My grace is sufficicnt for thee." "Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound." "By whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand."
3.
(Law)
(a)
The prerogative of mercy execised by the executive, as pardon.
(b)
The same prerogative when exercised in the form of equitable relief through chancery.
4.
Fortune; luck; used commonly with hard or sorry when it means misfortune. (Obs.)
5.
Inherent excellence; any endowment or characteristic fitted to win favor or confer pleasure or benefit. "He is complete in feature and in mind. With all good grace to grace a gentleman." "I have formerly given the general character of Mr. Addison's style and manner as natural and unaffected, easy and polite, and full of those graces which a flowery imagination diffuses over writing."
6.
Beauty, physical, intellectual, or moral; loveliness; commonly, easy elegance of manners; perfection of form. "Grace in women gains the affections sooner, and secures them longer, than any thing else." "I shall answer and thank you again For the gift and the grace of the gift."
7.
pl. (Myth.) Graceful and beautiful females, sister goddesses, represented by ancient writers as the attendants sometimes of Apollo but oftener of Venus. They were commonly mentioned as three in number; namely, Aglaia, Euphrosyne, and Thalia, and were regarded as the inspirers of the qualities which give attractiveness to wisdom, love, and social intercourse. "The Graces love to weave the rose." "The Loves delighted, and the Graces played."
8.
The title of a duke, a duchess, or an archbishop, and formerly of the king of England. "How fares your Grace!"
9.
(Commonly pl.) Thanks. (Obs.) "Yielding graces and thankings to their lord Melibeus."
10.
A petition for grace; a blessing asked, or thanks rendered, before or after a meal.
11.
pl. (Mus.) Ornamental notes or short passages, either introduced by the performer, or indicated by the composer, in which case the notation signs are called grace notes, appeggiaturas, turns, etc.
12.
(Eng. Universities) An act, vote, or decree of the government of the institution; a degree or privilege conferred by such vote or decree.
13.
pl. A play designed to promote or display grace of motion. It consists in throwing a small hoop from one player to another, by means of two sticks in the hands of each. Called also grace hoop or hoops.
Act of grace. See under Act.
Day of grace (Theol.), the time of probation, when the offer of divine forgiveness is made and may be accepted. "That day of grace fleets fast away."
Days of grace (Com.), the days immediately following the day when a bill or note becomes due, which days are allowed to the debtor or payer to make payment in. In Great Britain and the United States, the days of grace are three, but in some countries more, the usages of merchants being different.
Good graces, favor; friendship.
Grace cup.
(a)
A cup or vessel in which a health is drunk after grace.
(b)
A health drunk after grace has been said. "The grace cup follows to his sovereign's health."
Grace drink, a drink taken on rising from the table; a grace cup. "To (Queen Margaret, of Scotland)... we owe the custom of the grace drink, she having established it as a rule at her table, that whosoever staid till grace was said was rewarded with a bumper."
Grace hoop, a hoop used in playing graces. See Grace, n., 13.
Grace note (Mus.), an appoggiatura. See Appoggiatura, and def. 11 above.
Grace stroke, a finishing stoke or touch; a coup de grace.
Means of grace, means of securing knowledge of God, or favor with God, as the preaching of the gospel, etc.
To do grace, to reflect credit upon. "Content to do the profession some grace."
To say grace, to render thanks before or after a meal.
With a good grace, in a fit and proper manner grace fully; graciously.
With a bad grace, in a forced, reluctant, or perfunctory manner; ungraciously. "What might have been done with a good grace would at least be done with a bad grace."
Synonyms: Elegance; comeliness; charm; favor; kindness; mercy. Grace, Mercy. These words, though often interchanged, have each a distinctive and peculiar meaning. Grace, in the strict sense of the term, is spontaneous favor to the guilty or undeserving; mercy is kindness or compassion to the suffering or condemned. It was the grace of God that opened a way for the exercise of mercy toward men. See Elegance.



verb
Grace  v. t.  (past & past part. graced; pres. part. gracing)  
1.
To adorn; to decorate; to embellish and dignify. "Great Jove and Phoebus graced his noble line." "We are graced with wreaths of victory."
2.
To dignify or raise by an act of favor; to honor. "He might, at his pleasure, grace or disgrace whom he would in court."
3.
To supply with heavenly grace.
4.
(Mus.) To add grace notes, cadenzas, etc., to.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Grace" Quotes from Famous Books



... This was a German aeroplane of the class called the Taube (dove). These aeroplanes are quite beautiful in design, and fly with amazing rapidity. This one wafted over our hospital with all the grace of a living creature "calm in the consciousness of wings," and then, of course, we let fly at it. From all round us shells were sent up into the vast blue of the sky, and still the grey dove went on in ...
— My War Experiences in Two Continents • Sarah Macnaughtan

... maintained his former station off the coast of Havre de Grace, to observe what should pass at the mouth of the Seine. In the month of July, while he hovered in this neighbourhood, five large flat bottomed boats, laden with cannon and shot, feet sail from Harfleur in the middle of the day, with their colours flying, as if they had set the English squadron ...
— The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.II. - From William and Mary to George II. • Tobias Smollett

... sacred place. The married couple alone have the privilege of entering it, and more than one lady, we are told, makes her bed herself. Of all the crazes which reign beyond the sea, why should the only one which we despise be precisely that, whose grace and mystery ought undoubtedly to meet the approval of all tender souls on this continent? Refined women condemn the immodesty with which strangers are introduced into the sanctuary of marriage. As for us, who have energetically anathematized women ...
— Analytical Studies • Honore de Balzac

... months, or nine. I imagine that for stateliness and delicacy combined there are no plants that excel the Sobralia. At any single point they may be surpassed—among orchids, be it understood, by nothing else in Nature's realm—but their magnificence and grace together ...
— About Orchids - A Chat • Frederick Boyle

... what was said by the minister. Many times their rude hearts were touched, and the tears rolled down their swarthy faces, while she dwelt on the wondrous story of our Redeemer's life and death, and explained how the white man and the red man alike could be saved by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ. In after years the savages ...
— Woman on the American Frontier • William Worthington Fowler


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