Calm Definition

käm
calmed, calmer, calmest, calms
adjective
calmer, calmest
Nearly or completely motionless; undisturbed.
The calm surface of the lake.
American Heritage
Without wind or motion; still; quiet.
Webster's New World
Not agitated or excited; tranquil.
Webster's New World

(of a person) Peaceful, quiet, especially free from anger and anxiety.

Wiktionary

(of a place or situation) Free of noise and disturbance.

Wiktionary
noun
calms
Lack of wind or motion; stillness.
Webster's New World
A condition in which the air movement is less than one mile per hour.
Webster's New World
Lack of agitation or excitement; tranquillity; serenity.
Webster's New World

(in a person) The state of being calm; peacefulness; absence of worry, anger, fear or other strong negative emotion.

Wiktionary
verb
calmed, calms
To make or become calm or quiet.
A warm bath will calm you. After the storm, the air calmed.
American Heritage
To make or become calm.
Webster's New World
Synonyms:

Other Word Forms of Calm

Noun

Singular:
calm
Plural:
calms

Adjective

Base Form:
calm
Comparative:
calmer
Superlative:
calmest

Origin of Calm

  • Middle English calme from Old French from Old Italian calmo from Late Latin cauma heat of the day, resting place in the heat of the day from Greek kauma burning heat from kaiein to burn N., from Middle English calme from Italian calma from Vulgar Latin calma from Late Latin

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  • From Middle French calme, from Old Italian calma. Calma may derive from Latin cauma (“heat of the midday sun”), from Ancient Greek καῦμα (kauma, “heat, especially of the sun”), from καίω (kaiō, “I burn”), or possibly from Latin caleō, from Ancient Greek (Doric) κάλεoς (kaleos) (of the Ionic κήλεος (kēleos, “burning”)).

    From Wiktionary

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