head
♦♦♦ head /h'ed/ (heads heading headed)
Head is used in a large number of expressions which are explained under other words in the dictionary. For example, the expression `off the top of your head' is explained at `top'.
1 [N-COUNT]
Your head is the top part of your body, which has your eyes, mouth, and brain in it.
She turned her head away from him...
2 [N-COUNT]
You can use head to refer to your mind and your mental abilities.
...an exceptional analyst who could do complex maths in his head.
3 [N-SING] with supp
The head of a line of people or vehicles is the front of it, or the first person or vehicle in the line.
...the head of the queue...
4 [VERB] V n
If someone or something heads a line or procession, they are at the front of it.
The parson, heading the procession, had just turned right towards the churchyard.
5 [VERB] V n
If something heads a list or group, it is at the top of it.
Running a business heads the list of ambitions among the 1,000 people interviewed by Good Housekeeping magazine.
6 [N-SING] usu N of n
The head of something is the highest or top part of it.
...the head of the stairs...
Every day a different name was placed at the head of the chart.
= top
7 [N-COUNT] usu with supp
The head of something long and thin is the end which is wider than or a different shape from the rest, and which is often considered to be the most important part.
Keep the head of the club the same height throughout the swing.
8 [N-COUNT]
The head of a school is the teacher who is in charge. (mainly BRIT)
= head teacher
9 [N-COUNT] with supp
The head of a company or organization is the person in charge of it and in charge of the people in it.
Heads of government from more than 100 countries gather in Geneva tomorrow.
...the head waiter.
10 [VERB] V n, V-ed
If you head a department, company, or organization, you are the person in charge of it.
...Michael Williams, who heads the department's Office of Civil Rights.
...the ruling Socialist Party, headed by Dr Franz Vranitzky.
11 [N-COUNT] usu sing
The head on a glass of beer is the layer of small bubbles that form on the top of the beer.
12 [N-COUNT] usu sing, with supp
If you have a bad head, you have a headache. (BRIT INFORMAL)
I had a terrible head and was extraordinarily drunk.
13 [ADV] be ADV, ADV after v
If you toss a coin and it comes down heads, you can see the side of the coin which has a picture of a head on it.
`We might toss up for it,' suggested Ted. `If it's heads, then we'll talk.'...
Heads or tails?
14 [VERB] V for n, V adv/prep, V-ed
If you are heading for a particular place, you are going towards that place. In American English, you can also say that you are headed for a particular place.
He headed for the bus stop...
It is not clear how many of them will be heading back to Saudi Arabia tomorrow...
She and her child boarded a plane headed to where her family lived...
15 [VERB] V for/towards n, V-ed
If something or someone is heading for a particular result, the situation they are in is developing in a way that makes that result very likely. In American English, you can also say that something or someone is headed for a particular result.
The latest talks aimed at ending the civil war appear to be heading for deadlock...
The centuries-old ritual seems headed for extinction.
16 [VERB] usu passive, be V-ed quote
If a piece of writing is headed a particular title, it has that title written at the beginning of it.
One chapter is headed, `Beating the Test'.
17 [VERB] V n prep/adv
If you head a ball in football, you hit it with your head in order to make it go in a particular direction.
He headed the ball across the face of the goal.
18
see also heading
19 [PHRASE] amount PHR
You use a head or per head after stating a cost or amount in order to indicate that that cost or amount is for each person in a particular group.
This simple chicken dish costs less than £1 a head...
20 [PHRASE] oft be V-ed PHR
From head to foot means all over your body.
Colin had been put into a bath and been scrubbed from head to foot.
21 [PHRASE] have/with PHR, PHR n
If you a have a head for something, you can deal with it easily. For example, if you have a head for figures, you can do arithmetic easily, and if you have a head for heights, you can climb to a great height without feeling afraid.
I don't have a head for business.
22 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you get a fact or idea into your head, you suddenly realize or think that it is true and you usually do not change your opinion about it.
Once they get an idea into their heads, they never give up.
23 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you say that someone has got something into their head, you mean that they have finally understood or accepted it, and you are usually criticizing them because it has taken them a long time to do this.
Managers have at last got it into their heads that they can no longer accept inefficient operations.
24 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If alcoholic drink goes to your head, it makes you feel drunk.
That wine was strong, it went to your head.
25 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you say that something such as praise or success goes to someone's head, you are criticizing them because you think that it makes them too proud or confident.
Ford is definitely not a man to let a little success go to his head.
26 [PHRASE] v PHR, v-link PHR
If you are head over heels or head over heels in love, you are very much in love.
27 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you keep your head, you remain calm in a difficult situation. If you lose your head, you panic or do not remain calm in a difficult situation.
She was able to keep her head and not panic...
She lost her head and started screaming at me.
28 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you knock something on the head, you stop it. (BRIT INFORMAL)
When we stop enjoying ourselves we'll knock it on the head.
29 [PHRASE] N inflects
Phrases such as laugh your head off and scream your head off can be used to emphasize that someone is laughing or screaming a lot or very loudly.
He carried on telling a joke, laughing his head off.
30 [PHRASE] N inflects, usu v-link PHR
If you say that someone is off their head, you think that their ideas or behaviour are very strange, foolish, or dangerous. (mainly BRIT INFORMAL)
He's gone completely off his head.
31 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you stand an idea or argument on its head or turn it on its head, you think about it or treat it in a completely new and different way.
Their relationship turned the standard notion of marriage on its head.
32 [PHRASE] v-link PHR, PHR after v
If something such as an idea, joke, or comment goes over someone's head, it is too difficult for them to understand.
I admit that a lot of the ideas went way over my head.
33 [PHRASE] v-link PHR, PHR after v
If someone does something over another person's head, they do it without asking them or discussing it with them, especially when they should do so because the other person is in a position of authority.
He was reprimanded for trying to go over the heads of senior officers.
34 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you say that something unpleasant or embarrassing rears its ugly head or raises its ugly head, you mean that it occurs, often after not occurring for some time.
There was a problem which reared its ugly head about a week after she moved back in...
35 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you stand on your head, you balance upside down with the top of your head and your hands on the ground.
36 [PHRASE] usu with brd-neg, V inflects, PHR n
If you say that you cannot make head nor tail of something or you cannot make head or tail of it, you are emphasizing that you cannot understand it at all. (INFORMAL)
I couldn't make head nor tail of the damn film.
37 [PHRASE] V and N inflect, usu PHR to-inf
If somebody takes it into their head to do something, especially something strange or foolish, they suddenly decide to do it.
He suddenly took it into his head to go out to Australia to stay with his son.
38 [PHRASE] V inflects
If a problem or disagreement comes to a head or is brought to a head, it becomes so bad that something must be done about it.
These problems came to a head in September when five of the station's journalists were sacked.
39 [PHRASE] V inflects
If two or more people put their heads together, they talk about a problem they have and try to solve it.
So everyone put their heads together and eventually an amicable arrangement was reached.
40 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you keep your head above water, you just avoid getting into difficulties; used especially to talk about business.
We are keeping our head above water, but our cash flow position is not too good.
41 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you say that heads will roll as a result of something bad that has happened, you mean that people will be punished for it, especially by losing their jobs.
The group's problems have led to speculation that heads will roll.big head (big heads)
[N-COUNT]
If you describe someone as a big head, you disapprove of them because they think they are very clever and know everything. (INFORMAL)
= know-allhead boy (head boys)
[N-COUNT]
The head boy of a school is the boy who is the leader of the prefects and who often represents the school on public occasions. (BRIT)head count (head counts)
[N-COUNT]
If you do a head count, you count the number of people present. You can also use head count to talk about the number of people that are present at an event, or that an organization employs.head girl (head girls)
[N-COUNT]
The head girl of a school is the girl who is the leader of the prefects and who often represents the school on public occasions. (BRIT)head of state (heads of state)
[N-COUNT]
A head of state is the leader of a country, for example a president, king, or queen.head off
1 [PHRASAL VERB] V n P, also V P n (not pron)
If you head off a person, animal, or vehicle, you move to a place in front of them in order to capture them or make them change the direction they are moving in.
He changed direction swiftly, turned into the hallway and headed her off.
2 [PHRASAL VERB] V P n (not pron), V n P
If you head something off, especially something unpleasant, you take action before it is expected to happen in order to prevent it from happening.
He would ask Congress to intervene and head off a strike...
You have to be good at spotting trouble on the way and heading it off.head start (head starts)
[N-COUNT] usu sing, oft N on/over n
If you have a head start on other people, you have an advantage over them in something such as a competition or race.
A good education gives your child a head start in life.head teach|er (head teachers)
also headteacher
[N-COUNT]
A head teacher is a teacher who is in charge of a school. (BRIT)
= headhead up
[PHRASAL VERB] V P n (not pron), V n P
The person who heads up a group, organization, or activity is the leader of it.
Judge Frederick Lacey headed up the investigation...
We asked ourselves what we wanted from our management structure and who we wanted to head it up.talk|ing head (talking heads)
[N-COUNT]
Talking heads are people who appear in television discussion programmes and interviews to give their opinions about a topic. (JOURNALISM)
= pundit
Head is used in a large number of expressions which are explained under other words in the dictionary. For example, the expression `off the top of your head' is explained at `top'.
1 [N-COUNT]
Your head is the top part of your body, which has your eyes, mouth, and brain in it.
She turned her head away from him...
2 [N-COUNT]
You can use head to refer to your mind and your mental abilities.
...an exceptional analyst who could do complex maths in his head.
3 [N-SING] with supp
The head of a line of people or vehicles is the front of it, or the first person or vehicle in the line.
...the head of the queue...
4 [VERB] V n
If someone or something heads a line or procession, they are at the front of it.
The parson, heading the procession, had just turned right towards the churchyard.
5 [VERB] V n
If something heads a list or group, it is at the top of it.
Running a business heads the list of ambitions among the 1,000 people interviewed by Good Housekeeping magazine.
6 [N-SING] usu N of n
The head of something is the highest or top part of it.
...the head of the stairs...
Every day a different name was placed at the head of the chart.
= top
7 [N-COUNT] usu with supp
The head of something long and thin is the end which is wider than or a different shape from the rest, and which is often considered to be the most important part.
Keep the head of the club the same height throughout the swing.
8 [N-COUNT]
The head of a school is the teacher who is in charge. (mainly BRIT)
= head teacher
9 [N-COUNT] with supp
The head of a company or organization is the person in charge of it and in charge of the people in it.
Heads of government from more than 100 countries gather in Geneva tomorrow.
...the head waiter.
10 [VERB] V n, V-ed
If you head a department, company, or organization, you are the person in charge of it.
...Michael Williams, who heads the department's Office of Civil Rights.
...the ruling Socialist Party, headed by Dr Franz Vranitzky.
11 [N-COUNT] usu sing
The head on a glass of beer is the layer of small bubbles that form on the top of the beer.
12 [N-COUNT] usu sing, with supp
If you have a bad head, you have a headache. (BRIT INFORMAL)
I had a terrible head and was extraordinarily drunk.
13 [ADV] be ADV, ADV after v
If you toss a coin and it comes down heads, you can see the side of the coin which has a picture of a head on it.
`We might toss up for it,' suggested Ted. `If it's heads, then we'll talk.'...
Heads or tails?
14 [VERB] V for n, V adv/prep, V-ed
If you are heading for a particular place, you are going towards that place. In American English, you can also say that you are headed for a particular place.
He headed for the bus stop...
It is not clear how many of them will be heading back to Saudi Arabia tomorrow...
She and her child boarded a plane headed to where her family lived...
15 [VERB] V for/towards n, V-ed
If something or someone is heading for a particular result, the situation they are in is developing in a way that makes that result very likely. In American English, you can also say that something or someone is headed for a particular result.
The latest talks aimed at ending the civil war appear to be heading for deadlock...
The centuries-old ritual seems headed for extinction.
16 [VERB] usu passive, be V-ed quote
If a piece of writing is headed a particular title, it has that title written at the beginning of it.
One chapter is headed, `Beating the Test'.
17 [VERB] V n prep/adv
If you head a ball in football, you hit it with your head in order to make it go in a particular direction.
He headed the ball across the face of the goal.
18
see also heading
19 [PHRASE] amount PHR
You use a head or per head after stating a cost or amount in order to indicate that that cost or amount is for each person in a particular group.
This simple chicken dish costs less than £1 a head...
20 [PHRASE] oft be V-ed PHR
From head to foot means all over your body.
Colin had been put into a bath and been scrubbed from head to foot.
21 [PHRASE] have/with PHR, PHR n
If you a have a head for something, you can deal with it easily. For example, if you have a head for figures, you can do arithmetic easily, and if you have a head for heights, you can climb to a great height without feeling afraid.
I don't have a head for business.
22 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you get a fact or idea into your head, you suddenly realize or think that it is true and you usually do not change your opinion about it.
Once they get an idea into their heads, they never give up.
23 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you say that someone has got something into their head, you mean that they have finally understood or accepted it, and you are usually criticizing them because it has taken them a long time to do this.
Managers have at last got it into their heads that they can no longer accept inefficient operations.
24 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If alcoholic drink goes to your head, it makes you feel drunk.
That wine was strong, it went to your head.
25 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you say that something such as praise or success goes to someone's head, you are criticizing them because you think that it makes them too proud or confident.
Ford is definitely not a man to let a little success go to his head.
26 [PHRASE] v PHR, v-link PHR
If you are head over heels or head over heels in love, you are very much in love.
27 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you keep your head, you remain calm in a difficult situation. If you lose your head, you panic or do not remain calm in a difficult situation.
She was able to keep her head and not panic...
She lost her head and started screaming at me.
28 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you knock something on the head, you stop it. (BRIT INFORMAL)
When we stop enjoying ourselves we'll knock it on the head.
29 [PHRASE] N inflects
Phrases such as laugh your head off and scream your head off can be used to emphasize that someone is laughing or screaming a lot or very loudly.
He carried on telling a joke, laughing his head off.
30 [PHRASE] N inflects, usu v-link PHR
If you say that someone is off their head, you think that their ideas or behaviour are very strange, foolish, or dangerous. (mainly BRIT INFORMAL)
He's gone completely off his head.
31 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you stand an idea or argument on its head or turn it on its head, you think about it or treat it in a completely new and different way.
Their relationship turned the standard notion of marriage on its head.
32 [PHRASE] v-link PHR, PHR after v
If something such as an idea, joke, or comment goes over someone's head, it is too difficult for them to understand.
I admit that a lot of the ideas went way over my head.
33 [PHRASE] v-link PHR, PHR after v
If someone does something over another person's head, they do it without asking them or discussing it with them, especially when they should do so because the other person is in a position of authority.
He was reprimanded for trying to go over the heads of senior officers.
34 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you say that something unpleasant or embarrassing rears its ugly head or raises its ugly head, you mean that it occurs, often after not occurring for some time.
There was a problem which reared its ugly head about a week after she moved back in...
35 [PHRASE] V and N inflect
If you stand on your head, you balance upside down with the top of your head and your hands on the ground.
36 [PHRASE] usu with brd-neg, V inflects, PHR n
If you say that you cannot make head nor tail of something or you cannot make head or tail of it, you are emphasizing that you cannot understand it at all. (INFORMAL)
I couldn't make head nor tail of the damn film.
37 [PHRASE] V and N inflect, usu PHR to-inf
If somebody takes it into their head to do something, especially something strange or foolish, they suddenly decide to do it.
He suddenly took it into his head to go out to Australia to stay with his son.
38 [PHRASE] V inflects
If a problem or disagreement comes to a head or is brought to a head, it becomes so bad that something must be done about it.
These problems came to a head in September when five of the station's journalists were sacked.
39 [PHRASE] V inflects
If two or more people put their heads together, they talk about a problem they have and try to solve it.
So everyone put their heads together and eventually an amicable arrangement was reached.
40 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you keep your head above water, you just avoid getting into difficulties; used especially to talk about business.
We are keeping our head above water, but our cash flow position is not too good.
41 [PHRASE] V inflects
If you say that heads will roll as a result of something bad that has happened, you mean that people will be punished for it, especially by losing their jobs.
The group's problems have led to speculation that heads will roll.big head (big heads)
[N-COUNT]
If you describe someone as a big head, you disapprove of them because they think they are very clever and know everything. (INFORMAL)
= know-allhead boy (head boys)
[N-COUNT]
The head boy of a school is the boy who is the leader of the prefects and who often represents the school on public occasions. (BRIT)head count (head counts)
[N-COUNT]
If you do a head count, you count the number of people present. You can also use head count to talk about the number of people that are present at an event, or that an organization employs.head girl (head girls)
[N-COUNT]
The head girl of a school is the girl who is the leader of the prefects and who often represents the school on public occasions. (BRIT)head of state (heads of state)
[N-COUNT]
A head of state is the leader of a country, for example a president, king, or queen.head off
1 [PHRASAL VERB] V n P, also V P n (not pron)
If you head off a person, animal, or vehicle, you move to a place in front of them in order to capture them or make them change the direction they are moving in.
He changed direction swiftly, turned into the hallway and headed her off.
2 [PHRASAL VERB] V P n (not pron), V n P
If you head something off, especially something unpleasant, you take action before it is expected to happen in order to prevent it from happening.
He would ask Congress to intervene and head off a strike...
You have to be good at spotting trouble on the way and heading it off.head start (head starts)
[N-COUNT] usu sing, oft N on/over n
If you have a head start on other people, you have an advantage over them in something such as a competition or race.
A good education gives your child a head start in life.head teach|er (head teachers)
also headteacher
[N-COUNT]
A head teacher is a teacher who is in charge of a school. (BRIT)
= headhead up
[PHRASAL VERB] V P n (not pron), V n P
The person who heads up a group, organization, or activity is the leader of it.
Judge Frederick Lacey headed up the investigation...
We asked ourselves what we wanted from our management structure and who we wanted to head it up.talk|ing head (talking heads)
[N-COUNT]
Talking heads are people who appear in television discussion programmes and interviews to give their opinions about a topic. (JOURNALISM)
= pundit