con·tract
(kŏńtrăkt́)
[Middle English, from Latin contractus past participle of contrahere, to draw together, make a contract, com-, com-, + trahere, to draw.]
noun
- An agreement between two or more parties, especially one that is written and enforceable by law. See synonyms at bargain
- The writing or document containing such an agreement.
- The branch of law dealing with formal agreements between parties.
- Marriage as a formal agreement; betrothal.
- Games
- The last and highest bid of a suit in one hand in bridge.
- The number of tricks thus bid.
- Contract bridge.
- A paid assignment to murder someone: put out a contract on the mobster's life.
verb: -tract·ed, -tract·ing, -tracts.
transitive verb
- To enter into by contract; establish or settle by formal agreement: contract a marriage.
- To acquire or incur: contract obligations; contract a serious illness.
- To reduce in size by drawing together; shrink.
- To pull together; wrinkle.
- Grammar To shorten (a word or words) by omitting or combining some of the letters or sounds, as do not to don't.
intransitive verb
- To enter into or make an agreement: contract for garbage collection.
- To become reduced in size by or as if by being drawn together: The pupils of the patient's eyes contracted.
phrasal verbs
- contract out
- To engage a person outside an organization by contract to undertake or produce.
derivatives
- con·tract́i·biĺi·ty
- noun
- con·tract́i·ble
- adjective