Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

heave

verb transitive

[Gr. to breathe.]

heev. pret. heaved, or hove; pp. heaved, hove, formerly hoven.

heave

To lift; to raise; to move upward. So stretch’d out huge in length the arch fiend lay, Chain’d on the burning lake, nor ever hence . Had ris’n, or heaved his head.

heave

To cause to swell. The glittering finny swarms . That heave our friths and crowd upon our shores.

heave

To raise or force from the breast; as, to heave a sigh or groan, which is accompanied with a swelling or expansion of the thorax.

heave

To raise; to elevate; with high. One heaved on high.

heave

To puff; to elate.

heave

To throw; to cast; to send; as, to heave a stone. This is a common use of the word in popular language, and among seamen; as, to heave the lead.

heave

To raise by turning a windlass; with up; as, to heave up the anchor. Hence,

heave

To turn a windlass or capstern with bars or levers. Hence the order, to heave away. To heave ahead, to draw ship forwards. To heave astern, to cause to recede; to draw back. To heave down, to throw or lay down on one side; to careen. To heave out, to throw out. With seamen, to loose or unfurl a sail, particularly the stay-sails. To heave in stays, in tacking, to bring a ship’s head to the wind. To heave short, to draw so much of a cable into the ship, as that she is almost perpendicularly above the anchor. To heave a strain, to work at the windlass with unusual exertion. To heave taught, to turn a capsterntill the rope becomes straight. [See Taught and Tight.I . To heave to, to bring the ship’s head to the wind, and stop her motion. To heave up, to relinquish; as, to heave up a design.

heave

verb intransitive
heev. To swell, distend or dilate; as, a horse heaves in panting. Hence,

heave

To pant; to breathe with labor or pain; as, he heaves for breath.

heave

To keck; to make an effort to vomit.

heave

To rise in billows, as the sea; to swell.

heave

To rise; to be lifted; as, a ship heaves.

heave

To rise or swell, as the earth at the breaking up of frost. To heave in sight, to appear; to make its first appearance; as a ship at sea, or as a distant object approaching or being approached. We observe that this verb has often the sense of raising or rising in an arch or circular form, as in throwing and in distention, and from this sense is derived its application to the apparent arch over our heads.

heave

noun
A rising or swell; an exertion or effort upward. None could guess whether the next heave of the earthquake would settle or swallow them.

heave

Arising swell, or distention, as of the breast. These profound heaves.

heave

An effort to vomit.

heave

An effort to rise.