express

Moving or operating quickly, as a train not making local stops.

Adjective

  1. Moving or operating quickly, as a train not making local stops.

    Synonyms: fast crack

  2. Specific or precise; directly and distinctly stated; not merely implied.
    • I gave him express instructions not to begin until I arrived, but he ignored me.
    • This book cannot be copied without the express permission of the publisher.
    • Beginning with the next issue, which will be the January, 1950, issue, this magazine will be published on the first of every month. This step has been taken at the express wish of readers despite the present paper and...

    Synonyms: explicit plain clear direct express monosemic monosemous patent specific unambiguous unequivocal univocal

    Antonyms: implied

  3. Truly depicted; exactly resembling.
    • In my eyes it bore a livelier image of the spirit, it seemed more express and single, than the imperfect and divided countenance.
    • Soon as the potion works, their human countenance, / The express resemblance of the gods, is changed / Into some brutish form, of wolf, or bear, / Or ounce, or tiger, hog, or bearded goat, / All other parts remaining as...
  4. Providing a more limited but presumably faster service than a full or complete dealer of the same kind or type.
    • Tesco Express
    • McDonald's Express

Origin

From French exprès, from Latin expressus, past participle of exprimere (see Etymology 2, below).

Forms

more express most express

Derived

express elevator express kidnapping express lane express officer express road express train FedEx

Adverb

  1. Moving or operating quickly, as a train not making local stops.
    • The train runs express to 96 St.

Noun Entry 3

  1. A mode of transportation, often a train, that travels quickly or directly, either on a regular schedule or as a special or excursion. Express trains often pass through stations along the way without stopping at them.
    • I took the express into town.
    • Your attention please. Train 4715 is now boarding on track 3, section B. This train is an express. This train does not stop at Foo, Bar, or Fubar stations.
    • The train was moving less fast through the summer night. The swift express had changed into something almost a parliamentary, had stopped three times since Norwich, and now, at long last, was approaching Banton. - 1931,...

    Antonyms: local stopper

    1. (Philippines, chiefly Metro Manila) a public utility vehicle, typically a jeepney, that traverses through an expressway

      Antonyms: local stopper

  2. A service that allows mail or money to be sent rapidly from one destination to another.
  3. An express rifle.
    • "Give me my express," I said, laying down the Winchester, and he handed it to me cocked. - 1885, H. Rider Haggard, King Solomon's Mines:
  4. A clear image or representation; an expression; a plain declaration.
    • And this [holy communion] being the great myſtery of Chriſtianity, and the onely remanent expreſſe of Chriſts ſacrifice on earth, it is moſt conſonant to the Analogy of the myſtery, that this commemorative ſacrifice be...
  5. A messenger sent on a special errand; a courier.
    • I learned, to my inexpressible terror, that at two o'clock, the day before, an express had been sent to Geraldine by Mr Bergasse, with a letter, which he had received from the Hotel de Romagnecourt. - 1792, Charlotte...
  6. An express office.
    • She charged him […] to ask at the express if anything came up from town. - 1873, Edward Everett Hale, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day:
  7. That which is sent by an express messenger or message.
    • popular captations, which some men use in their Speeches, and Expresses - 1648, attributed to Charles I of England, Εἰκὼν Βασιλική [Eikōn Basilikē = Royal Portrait]. The Pourtraicture of His Sacred Maiestie, in His...
    • “5th, If an express requires extraordinary despatch, the man-mountain shall be obliged to carry, in his pocket, the messenger and horse a six days journey, once in every moon, and return the said messenger back (if so...
    • So much was Sir Edward delighted that he sent an express to inform Lord Meersbrook of this great act of friendship, in order that he might be the more easy on their account;... - 1842, [anonymous collaborator of Letitia...

Forms

expresses

Derived

ankle express

Noun obsolete

  1. The action of conveying some idea using words or actions; communication, expression.
    • Whereby they discoursed in silence, and were intuitively understood from the theory of their expresses. - 1646, Sir Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica, V.20:
  2. A specific statement or instruction.
    • This Gentleman [...] caused a man to go down no less than a hundred fathom, with express to take notice whether it were hard or soft in the place where it groweth. - 1646, Sir Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica, II.5:

Origin

From Old French espresser, expresser, from frequentative form of Latin exprimere.

Forms

expresses

Verb

  1. To convey or communicate; to make known or explicit.
    • Words cannot express the love I feel for him.
    • We expressed our readiness, and in ten minutes were in the station wagon, rolling rapidly down the long drive, for it was then after nine. We passed on the way the van of the guests from Asquith. As we reached the lodge...
    • Services during Yom Kippur are held continuously through the day and include readings from the Torah and the reciting of prayers expressing regret or asking for forgiveness. - 2019 October 8, Christina Maxouris, Doug...

    Synonyms: outspeak utter articulate common communicate convey express make known portray put

    Coordinate Terms: put

  2. To press, squeeze out (especially said of milk).
    • The people of his island of Rokovoko, it seems, at their wedding feasts express the fragrant water of young cocoanuts into a large stained calabash like a punchbowl […] - 1851 November 14, Herman Melville, “chapter 13”,...
    • It contained many cysts which were filled with sagolike granules that could be expressed under pressure. - 1949, United States Naval Medical Bulletin, volume 49, number 1, page 61:
    • They don’t have teats, so the mothers express their milk onto their bellies for their young to feed. - 2018 March 15, Kelsey Munroe, “Platypus milk: unlikely weapon in fight against superbugs”, in The Guardian, archived...
  3. To translate messenger RNA into protein.
  4. To transcribe deoxyribonucleic acid into messenger RNA.
    • When a cell “expresses” a gene, it translates the DNA first into a signature messenger RNA (mRNA) sequence and subsequently into a chain of amino acids that forms a protein. - 2015 November 28, Ferris Jabr, “How Humans...

Forms

expresses expressing expressed

Related

expressible expressibly expression expressive expressively expressly

Derived

agroexpress coexpress co-express expressable expressage expressed expressed emotion expressedly expressless expressman expressness expressome express oneself expressor expressway FedEx hyperexpress immunoexpress misexpress overexpress re-express reexpress superexpress underexpress