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noun

contract

KONT-rakt
noun
1
A written or spoken agreement, especially one intended to be enforceable by law.
"She signed a two-year contract with the new employer."
"The builders breached the contract by missing the deadline."
verb
1
To become smaller, tighter, or shorter.
"Metal contracts as it cools."
"Her pupils contracted in the bright sunlight."
2
To catch or develop an illness.
"He contracted malaria while traveling abroad."
3
To arrange for work to be done under a formal agreement.
"The council contracted a local firm to repair the roads."

How to Use Contract

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishA formal agreement between parties, or, as a verb, to shrink — or to catch a disease.

Common mistake

Note the stress shift: as a noun it's CON-tract, but as a verb meaning "to shrink" or "agree" it's con-TRACT.

Common pairings
sign a contract breach of contract contract a disease contract muscles

Word Forms

contracted past tense, contracts plural, contracts singular

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Fill the Gap

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She signed a two-year _____ with the new employer.

Etymology

From Old French contract, from Latin contractus, the noun from contrahere ("to draw together, to conclude a bargain") — from con- ("together") plus trahere ("to draw, pull").

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial