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fathom

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Dictionary: fath·om   (făTH'əm) pronunciation
n. (Abbr. fth. or fm.)
A unit of length equal to 6 feet (1.83 meters), used principally in the measurement and specification of marine depths.

tr.v., -omed, -om·ing, -oms.
  1. To penetrate to the meaning or nature of; comprehend.
  2. To determine the depth of; sound.

[Middle English fathme, from Old English fæthm, outstretched arms.]

fathomable fath'om·a·ble adj.

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Thesaurus: fathom
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verb

  1. To perceive and recognize the meaning of: accept, apprehend, catch (on), compass, comprehend, conceive, follow, get, grasp, make out, read, see, sense, take, take in, understand. Informal savvy. Slang dig. Chiefly British twig. Scots ken. Idioms: gethavea handle on, get the picture. See understand/misunderstand.
  2. To perceive directly with the intellect: apprehend, compass, comprehend, grasp, know, understand. Scots ken. See knowledge/ignorance.

Antonyms: fathom
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v

Definition: discern, understand
Antonyms: misunderstand, not get


n. a unit of length equal to 6 feet (1.8 meters), chiefly used in reference to the depth of water: sonar says that we're in 18 fathoms.

Etymology: Old English fæthm, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vadem, vaam and German Faden ‘six feet.’ The original sense was ‘something which embraces, ’ (plural) ‘the outstretched arms;’ hence, a unit of measurement based on the span of the outstretched arms, later standardized to 6 feet.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

Measures and Units: fathom
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length Originally a body measure, being the distance spanned finger-tip to finger-tip by the outstretched arms and hands.

British/American Usually, and distinctively as the warship fathom, 6 ft (1.828 8 m, 72 in), but sometimes = 1/100 cable's length. Despite the long history of being 6 feet, the fathom had other meanings even in 19th-century England, being traditionally 5.5 ft (1.676 4 m, 65 in) on merchant ships and both 5 ft (1.524 m, 60 in) and 7 ft (2.136 6 m, 84 in) on fishing vessels. See inch for precise sizing.

History

A ‘fathom’ was used in ancient Egypt, then in ancient Greece, but lost place to the 5-foot pace in Roman practice. As a natural body measure it would have been fairly close to 6 ft or 1.8 m. By chance, such a size produces a figure of a little over 1 000 fathoms for the geographic mile, i.e. the distance between two points on a meridian separated by 1 minute of latitude. The actual value of this distance is very close to the modern standard for the international nautical mile (INM), of 1852 m (6076.~ ft), so about 1 013 BI fathoms. The French, measuring Earth in the 1790s to establish the size of the metre, used their fathom (the toise) as their measuring stick.

Unit Conversions: fathoms
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To convert from fathoms to:

meter, multiply by 1.828804.
feet, multiply by 6.

Convert:  Into: 
Result: 

A unit of measurement which is essentially the distance between the fingers of outstreached arms. Originally "faedm" an Anglo Saxon word meaning hug or embrace, fadems were marked on a rope by a knot so that when thrown overboard attached to an anchor a sailor would count off the knots or fathoms to the bottom.
(Source: "Salty Talk", Naval History, U. S. Naval Institute, October 2002)

Word Tutor: fathom
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A measure of length equal to 6 feet. Also: to come to understand.

pronunciation I cannot fathom the meaning of the clues in the poem.

Translations: Fathom
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - favn
v. tr. - favne op, lodde, udgrunde

idioms:

  • fathom out    regne ud

Nederlands (Dutch)
doorgronden, peilen, vadem (1, 83 meter), begrip, stuk hout van 1, 83m2 doorsnee

Français (French)
n. - (Naut) brasse anglaise (= 1.83 m)
v. tr. - (Naut) sonder

idioms:

  • fathom out    comprendre

Deutsch (German)
v. - verstehen, sondieren
n. - Faden

idioms:

  • fathom out    verstehen

Ελληνική (Greek)
v. - (ναυτ.) βυθομετρώ, βολιδοσκοπώ, (μτφ.) εμβαθύνω, μπαίνω στο νόημα
n. - (ναυτ.) οργιά

idioms:

  • fathom out    βολιδοσκοπώ

Italiano (Italian)
penetrare, sondare, andare a fondo, capire bene

idioms:

  • fathom out    riuscire a capire

Português (Portuguese)
v. - compreender, profundar
n. - braça (f) (unidade de medida)

idioms:

  • fathom out    compreender

Русский (Russian)
измерять глубину, морская сажень

idioms:

  • fathom out    понимать, догадываться

Español (Spanish)
n. - braza
v. tr. - calar, penetrar, profundizar, comprender, medir utilizando la braza

idioms:

  • fathom out    averiguar, comprobar

Svenska (Swedish)
v. - utgrunda, mäta djupet av
n. - famn

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
深度单位, 寻, 测量深度, 彻底了解, 看穿

idioms:

  • fathom out    计算出

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 深度單位, 噚
v. tr. - 測量深度, 徹底瞭解, 看穿

idioms:

  • fathom out    計算出

한국어 (Korean)
n. - (단위) 두 팔을 벌린 (6피트 정도), (상식, 학습 등의) 심도
v. tr. - (수심) 재다, 추측하다

idioms:

  • fathom out    이해 할 수 있다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 尋, ファゾム, 理解
v. - 推測する, 水深を測る, 探りを入れる

idioms:

  • fathom out    探り出す

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(فعل) يسبر غور , يقيس (الاسم) مقياس, لعمق الماء‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮פאתום (כשני מטר)‬
v. tr. - ‮הבין, ירד לעומק, מדד עומק של מים‬


 
 

Did you mean: fathom, Fathom, Fathom (comics), Fathom (1967 Spy Film), Surface (TV series), Fathom (Action Atari Video Computer System Game), Fathom (Action ColecoVision Game) More...

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fm.
fath (abbreviation)
fm. (abbreviation)

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