Roget's Thesaurus by Peter Mark Roget
698. conqueror, victor, winner; master of the situation, master of the
2595 words | Chapter 148
position, top of the heap, king of the hill; achiever, success, success
story. V. succeed; be successful &c. adj.; gain one's end, gain one's
ends; crown with success. gain a point, attain a point, carry a point,
secure a point, win a point, win an object; get there *[U.S.]; manage
to, contrive to; accomplish &c. (effect, complete) 729; do wonders,
work wonders; make a go of it. come off well, come off successful, come
off with flying colors; make short work of; take by storm, carry by
storm; bear away the bell; win one's wings, win one's spurs, win the
battle; win the day, carry the day, gain the day, gain the prize, gain
the palm; have the best of it, have it all one's own way, have the game
in one's owns hands, have the ball at one's feet, have one on the hop;
walk over the course; carry all before one, remain in possession of the
field; score a success. speed; make progress &c. (advance) 282; win
one's way, make one's way, work one's way, find one's way; strive to
some purpose; prosper &c. 734; drive a roaring trade; make profit &c.
(acquire) 775; reap the fruits, gather the fruits, reap the benefit of,
reap the harvest; strike oil * [U.S.], gain a windfall; make one's
fortune, get in the harvest, turn to good account; turn to account &c.
(use) 677. triumph, be triumphant; gain a victory, obtain a victory,
gain an advantage; chain victory to one's car; nail a coonskin to the
wall. surmount a difficulty, overcome a difficulty, get over a
difficulty, get over an obstacle &c. 706; se tirer d'affaire[Fr]; make
head against; stem the torrent, stem the tide, stem the current;
weather the storm, weather a point; turn a corner, keep one's head
above water, tide over; master; get the better of, have the better of,
gain the better of, gain the best of, gain the upper hand, gain the
ascendancy, gain the whip hand, gain the start of; distance; surpass
&c. (superiority) 33. defeat, conquer, vanquish, discomfit; euchre;
overcome, overthrow, overpower, overmaster, overmatch, overset[obs3],
override, overreach; outwit, outdo, outflank, outmaneuver, outgeneral,
outvote; take the wind out of one's adversary's sails; beat, beat
hollow; rout, lick, drub, floor, worst; put down, put to flight, put to
the rout, put hors de combat[Fr], put out of court. silence, quell,
nonsuit[obs3], checkmate, upset, confound, nonplus, stalemate, trump;
baffle &c. (hinder) 706; circumvent, elude; trip up, trip up the heels
of; drive into a corner, drive to the wall; run hard, put one's nose
out of joint. settle, do for; break the neck of, break the back of;
capsize, sink, shipwreck, drown, swamp; subdue; subjugate &c. (subject)
749; reduce; make the enemy bite the dust; victimize, roll in the dust,
trample under foot, put an extinguisher upon. answer, answer the
purpose; avail, prevail, take effect, do, turn out well, work well,
take, tell, bear fruit; hit it, hit the mark, hit the right nail on the
head; nick it; turn up trumps, make a hit; find one's account in. Adj.
succeeding &c. v.; successful; prosperous &c. 734; triumphant; flushed
with success, crowned with success; victorious, on top; set up; in the
ascendant; unbeaten &c. (see beat &c. v.); well-spent; felicitous,
effective, in full swing. Adv. successfully &c. adj.; well flying
colors, in triumph, swimmingly; a merveille[Fr], beyond all hope; to
some purpose, to good purpose; to one's heart's content. Phr. veni vidi
vici[Lat], the day being one's own, one's star in the ascendant; omne
tulit punctum[Lat]. bis vincit qui se vincit in victoria[obs3][Lat];
cede repugnanti cedendo victor abibis [Lat][Ovid]; chacun est l'artisan
de sa fortune[Fr]; dies faustus[Lat]; l'art de vaincre est celui de
mepriser la mort[Fr]; omnia vincit amor [Lat: love conquers all];
"peace hath her victories no less renowned than war" [Milton]; "the
race by vigor not by vaunts is won" [Pope]; vincit qui patitur[Lat];
vincit qui se vincit[Lat]; "The race is not always to the swift, nor
the battle to the strong, but that's the way to bet" [Mark Twain].
#732. Failure.—N. failure; nonsuccess[obs3], nonfulfillment; dead
failure, successlessness[obs3]; abortion, miscarriage; brutum fulmen
&c. 158[Lat]; labor in vain &c. (inutility) 645; no go;
inefficacy[obs3]; inefficaciousness &c. adj.; vain attempt, ineffectual
attempt, abortive attempt, abortive efforts; flash in the pan, "lame
and impotent conclusion" [Othello]; frustration; slip 'twixt cup and
lip &c. (disappointment) 509. blunder &c. (mistake) 495; fault,
omission, miss, oversight, slip, trip, stumble, claudication|,
footfall; false step, wrong step; faux pas[Fr], titubation[obs3],
bvue[Fr], faute[Fr], lurch; botchery &c. (want of skill) 699[obs3];
scrape, mess, fiasco, breakdown; flunk [U.S.]. mishap &c. (misfortune)
735; split, collapse, smash, blow, explosion. repulse, rebuff, defeat,
rout, overthrow, discomfiture; beating, drubbing; quietus,
nonsuit[obs3], subjugation; checkmate, stalemate, fool's mate. fall,
downfall, ruin, perdition; wreck &c. (destruction) 162; deathblow;
bankruptcy &c. (nonpayment) 808. losing game, affaire flambe. victim;
bankrupt; flunker[obs3], flunky [U.S.]. V. fail; be unsuccessful &c.
adj.; not succeed &c. 731; make vain efforts &c.n.; do in vain, labor
in vain, toil in vain; flunk [U.S.]; lose one's labor, take nothing by
one's motion; bring to naught, make nothing of; wash a blackamoor white
&c. (impossible) 471; roll the stones of Sisyphus &c. (useless) 645; do
by halves &c. (not complete) 730; lose ground &c. (recede) 282; fall
short of &c. 304. miss, miss one's aim, miss the mark, miss one's
footing, miss stays; slip, trip, stumble; make a slip &c., n. blunder
&c. 495, make a mess of, make a botch of; bitch it|, miscarry, abort,
go up like a rocket and come down like the stick, come down in flames,
get shot down, reckon without one's host; get the wrong pig by the
tail, get the wrong sow by the ear &c. (blunder, mismanage) 699. limp,
halt, hobble, titubate[obs3]; fall, tumble; lose one's balance; fall to
the ground, fall between two stools; flounder, falter, stick in the
mud, run aground, split upon a rock; beat one's head against a stone
wall, run one's head against a stone wall, knock one's head against a
stone wall, dash one's head against a stone wall; break one's back;
break down, sink, drown, founder, have the ground cut from under one;
get into trouble, get into a mess, get into a scrape; come to grief &c.
(adversity) 735; go to the wall, go to the dogs, go to pot; lick the
dust, bite the dust; be defeated &c. 731; have the worst of it, lose
the day, come off second best, lose; fall a prey to; succumb &c.
(submit) 725; not have a leg to stand on. come to nothing, end in
smoke; flat out |; fall to the ground, fall through, fall dead, fall
stillborn, fall flat; slip through one's fingers; hang fire, miss fire;
flash in the pan, collapse; topple down &c. (descent) 305; go to wrack
and ruin &c. (destruction) 162. go amiss, go wrong, go cross, go hard
with, go on a wrong tack; go on ill, come off ill, turn out ill, work
ill; take a wrong term, take an ugly term; take an ugly turn, take a
turn for the worse. be all over with, be all up with; explode; dash
one's hopes &c. (disappoint) 509; defeat the purpose; sow the wind and
reap the whirlwind, jump out of the frying pan into the fire, go from
the frying pan into the fire. Adj. unsuccessful, successless[obs3];
failing, tripping &c.v.; at fault; unfortunate &c. 735. abortive,
addle, stillborn; fruitless, bootless; ineffectual, ineffective,
inconsequential, trifling, nugatory; inefficient &c. (impotent) 158;
insufficient &c. 640; unavailing &c. (useless) 645; of no effect.
aground, grounded, swamped, stranded, cast away, wrecked, foundered,
capsized, shipwrecked, nonsuited[obs3]; foiled; defeated &c. 731;
struck down, borne down, broken down; downtrodden; overborne,
overwhelmed; all up with; ploughed, plowed, plucked. lost, undone,
ruined, broken; bankrupt &c. (not paying) 808; played out; done up,
done for; dead beat, ruined root and branch, flambe[obs3], knocked on
the head; destroyed &c. 162. frustrated, crossed, unhinged,
disconcerted dashed; thrown off one's balance, thrown on one's back,
thrown on one's beam ends|; unhorsed, in a sorry plight; hard hit.
stultified, befooled[obs3], dished, hoist on one's own petard;
victimized, sacrificed. wide of the mark &c. (error) 495; out of one's
reckoning &c. (inexpectation) 508[obs3]; left in the lurch; thrown away
&c. (wasted) 638; unattained; uncompleted &c. 730. Adv. unsuccessfully
&c. adj.; to little or no purpose, in vain, re infecta[Lat]. Phr. the
bubble has burst, "the jig is up", "the game is up" [Cymbeline]; all is
lost; the devil to pay; parturiunt montes &c. (disappointment)
509[Lat]; dies infaustus[Lat]; tout est perdu hors l'honneur[Fr].
#733. Trophy.—N. trophy; medal, prize, palm, award; laurel,
#
laurels; bays, crown, chaplet, wreath, civic crown; insignia &c. 550;
feather in one's cap &c. (honor) 873; decoration &c. 877; garland,
triumphal arch, Victoria Cross, Iron Cross.
triumph &c. (celebration) 883; flying colors &c. (show) 882.
monumentum aere perennius [Lat][obs3][Hor.].
Phr. "for valor."
#734. Prosperity.—N. prosperity, welfare, well-being; affluence
&c. (wealth) 803; success &c. 731; thrift, roaring trade; good fortune,
smiles of fortune; blessings, godsend. luck; good luck, run of luck;
sunshine; fair weather, fair wind; palmy days, bright days, halcyon
days; piping times, tide, flood, high tide. Saturnia regna[Lat],
Saturnian age; golden time, golden age; bed of roses, fat city [coll.];
fat of the land, milk and honey, loaves and fishes. made man, lucky
dog, enfant gate[Fr], spoiled child of fortune. upstart, parvenu,
skipjack[obs3], mushroom. V. prosper, thrive, flourish; be prosperous
&c adj.; drive a roaring trade, do a booming business; go on well, go
on smoothly, go on swimmingly; sail before the wind, swim with the
tide; run smooth, run smoothly, run on all fours. rise in the world,
get on in the world; work one's way, make one's way; look up; lift
one's head, raise one's head, make one's fortune, feather one's nest,
make one's pile. flower, blow, blossom, bloom, fructify, bear fruit,
fatten. keep oneself afloat; keep one's head above water, hold one's
head above water; land on one's feet, light on one's feet, light on
one's legs, fall on one's legs, fall on one's feet; drop into a good
thing; bear a charmed life; bask in the sunshine; have a good time of
it, have a fine time of it; have a run of luck; have the good fortune
&c. n. to; take a favorable turn; live on the fat of the land, live off
the fat of the land, live in clover. Adj. prosperous; thriving &c. v.;
in a fair way, buoyant; well off, well to do, well to do in the world;
set up, at one's ease; rich &c. 803; in good case; in full, in high
feather; fortunate, lucky, in luck; born with a silver spoon in one's
mouth, born under a lucky star; on the sunny side of the hedge.
auspicious, propitious, providential. palmy, halcyon; agreeable &c.
829; couleur de rose[Fr]. Adv. prosperously &c. adj.; swimmingly; as
good luck would have it; beyond all hope. Phr. one's star in the
ascendant, all for the best, one's course runs smooth. chacun est
l'artisan de sa fortune[Fr]; donec eris felix multos numerabis amicos
[Lat][Ovid]; felicitas multos habet amicos[Lat]; felix se nescit amari
[Lat][Lucan]; 'good luck go with thee' [Henry V]; nulli est homini
perpetuum bonum [Lat][Plautus].
#735. Adversity.—N. adversity, evil &c. 619; failure &c. 732; bad
luck, ill luck, evil luck, adverse luck, hard fortune, hard hap, hard
luck, hard lot; frowns of fortune; evil dispensation, evil star, evil
genius|; vicissitudes of life, ups and downs of life, broken fortunes;
hard case, hard lines, hard life; sea of troubles; peck of troubles;
hell upon earth; slough of despond. trouble, hardship, curse, blight,
blast, load, pressure. pressure of the times, iron age, evil day, time
out of joint; hard times, bad times, sad times; rainy day, cloud, dark
cloud, gathering clouds, ill wind; visitation, infliction; affliction
&c. (painfulness) 830; bitter pill; care, trial; the sport of fortune.
mishap, mischance, misadventure, misfortune; disaster, calamity,
catastrophe; accident, casualty, cross, reverse, check, contretemps,
rub; backset[obs3], comedown, setback [U.S.]. losing game; falling &c.
v.; fall, downfall; ruination, ruinousness; undoing; extremity; ruin
&c. (destruction) 162. V. be ill off &c. adj.; go hard with; fall on
evil, fall on evil days; go on ill; not prosper &c. 734. go downhill,
go to rack and ruin &c. (destruction) 162, go to the dogs; fall, fall
from one's high estate; decay, sink, decline, go down in the world;
have seen better days; bring down one's gray hairs with sorrow to the
grave; come to grief; be all over, be up with; bring a wasp's nest
about one's ears, bring a hornet's nest about one's ears. Adj.
unfortunate, unblest[obs3], unhappy, unlucky; improsperous[obs3],
unprosperous; hoodooed [U.S.]; luckless, hapless; out of luck; in
trouble, in a bad way, in an evil plight; under a cloud; clouded; ill
off, badly off; in adverse circumstances; poor &c. 804; behindhand,
down in the world, decayed, undone; on the road to ruin, on its last
legs, on the wane; in one's utmost need. planet-struck, devoted; born
under an evil star, born with a wooden ladle in one's mouth; ill-fated,
ill-starred, ill-omened. adverse, untoward; disastrous, calamitous,
ruinous, dire, deplorable.
#736. Mediocrity.—N. moderate circumstances, average
circumstances; respectability; middle classes; mediocrity; golden mean
&c. (mid-course) 628, (moderation) 174. V. jog on; go fairly, go
quietly, go peaceably, go tolerably, go respectably, get on fairly, get
on quietly, get on peaceably, get on tolerably, get on respectably.
DIVISION (II) INTERSOCIAL VOLITION[1]
[1] Implying the action of the will of one mind over the will of
another.
SECTION I. GENERAL INTERSOCIAL VOLITION
#737. Authority.—N. authority; influence, patronage, power,
preponderance, credit, prestige, prerogative, jurisdiction; right &c.
(title) 924; direction &c. 693; government &c. 737a. divine right,
dynastic rights, authoritativeness; absoluteness, absolutism;
despotism; jus nocendi[Lat]; jus divinum[Lat]. mastery, mastership,
masterdom[obs3]; dictation, control. hold, grasp; grip, gripe; reach;
iron sway &c. (severity) 739; fangs, clutches, talons; rod of empire
&c. (scepter) 747. [Vicarious authority] commission &c. 755; deputy
&c.759; permission &c. 760. V. authorize &c. (permit) 760; warrant &c.
(right) 924; dictate &c. (order) 741. be at the head of &c. adj.; hold
office, be in office, fill an office; hold master, occupy master, a
post master, be master &c. 745. have the upper hand, get the upper
hand, have the whip, get the whip; gain a hold upon, preponderate,
dominate, rule the roost; boss [U.S.]; override, overrule, overawe;
lord it over, hold in hand, keep under, make a puppet of, lead by the
nose, turn round one's little finger, bend to one's will, hold one's
own, wear the breeches; have the ball at one's feet, have it all one's
own way, have the game in one's own hand, have on the hip, have under
one's thumb; be master of the situation; take the lead, play first
fiddle, set the fashion; give the law to; carry with a high hand; lay
down the law; "ride in the whirlwind and direct the storm" [Addison];
rule with a rod of iron &c. (severity) 739. Adj. at the head, dominant,
paramount, supreme, predominant, preponderant, in the ascendant,
influential; arbitrary; compulsory &c. 744: stringent. at one's
command; in one's power, in one's grasp; under control. Adv. in the
name of, by the authority of, de par le Roi[Fr], in virtue of; under
the auspices of, in the hands of. at one's pleasure; by a dash if the
pen, by a stroke of the pen; ex mero motu[Lat]; ex cathedra[Lat: from
the chair]. Phr. the gray mare the better horse; "every inch a king"
[Lear].
#737a. Government.—N. government, legal authority, soveriegn,
sovereign authority; authority &c. 737; master &c. 745; direction &c.
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