Adjective: played pleydVerb: play pley
- Participate in a game or sport
"Pele played for the Brazilian teams in many important matches"; "We played hockey all afternoon"; "play cards"
- Act or have an effect in a specified way or with a specific effect or outcome
"I played no role in your dismissal"; "This factor played only a minor part in his decision"; "This development played into her hands"
- Be engaged in playful activity; amuse oneself in a way characteristic of children
"The kids were playing outside all day"; "I used to play with trucks as a little girl"
- Perform music using musical instruments
"The band played all night long"
- (music) perform music on (a musical instrument)
"He plays the flute"; "Can you play on this old recorder?"
- Perform a role or part
"Gielgud played Hamlet"; "She played the servant to her husband's master";
- act, represent
- Pretend to have certain qualities or state of mind
"She plays deaf when the news are bad";
- act, act as
- Replay (as a melody)
"Play it again, Sam"; "She played the third movement very beautifully";
- spiel
- Engage in recreational activities rather than work; occupy oneself in a diversion
"On weekends I play";
- recreate
- Contend against an opponent in a sport, game, or battle
"Princeton plays Yale this weekend"; "Charlie likes to play Mary";
- meet, encounter, take on
- (performing arts) perform on a certain location
"The prodigy played Carnegie Hall at the age of 16"; "She has been playing on Broadway for years"
- Emit recorded sound
"The tape was playing for hours"; "the stereo was playing Beethoven when I entered"
- Pretend to be somebody in the framework of a game or playful activity
"Play cowboy and Indians"; "Let's play like I am mommy"
- Put (a card or piece) into play during a game, or act strategically as if in a card game
"He is playing his cards close to his chest"; "The Democrats still have some cards to play before they will concede the electoral victory"
- Bet or wager (money)
"He played $20 on the new horse"; "She plays the races"
- Make bets
"Play the races"; "play the casinos in Trouville"
- Move or seem to move quickly, lightly, or irregularly
"The spotlights played on the politicians"
- Deal with something casually or playfully rather than seriously
"they playd with the idea of moving to Florida";
- toy, dally, flirt
- Behave in a certain way
"play fair"; "play safe"; "play it safe"
- Cause to emit recorded audio or video
"I'll play you my favourite record"; "He never tires of playing that video";
- run
- Handle or manipulate something idly or absentmindedly
"She played nervously with her wedding ring"; "He played with the idea of running for the Senate";
- toy, fiddle
- Use to one's advantage
"She plays on her clients' emotions"
- Consider not very seriously
"She plays with the thought of moving to Tasmania";
- dally, trifle
- Be received, accepted or interpreted in a specific way
"This speech didn't play well with the American public"; "His remarks played to the suspicions of the committee"
- Cause to move or operate freely within a bounded space
"The engine has a wheel that is playing in a rack"
- Perform on a stage or theatre
"She acts in this play"; "I played in ‘A Christmas Carol’"; "She playacts in this play";
- act, playact
- (performing arts) be performed or presented for public viewing
"What's playing in the local movie theatre?"; "‘Cats’ has been playing on Broadway for many years"
- Cause to happen or to occur as a consequence
"play a joke";
- bring, work, wreak, make for
- Discharge or direct or be discharged or directed as if in a continuous stream
"play water from a hose"; "The fountains played all day"
- Stake money or something else of value on the outcome of an unpredictable event or disputed issue
"She played all her money on the dark horse";
- bet, wager
- Shoot or hit in a particular manner
"She played a good backhand last night"
- Use or move
"I had to play my queen"
- Employ in a game or in a specific position
"They played him on first base"
- Exhaust by allowing to pull on the line
"play a hooked fish"
- Manipulate or exploit a system to one's advantage, esp. in an unfair way
"he playd the ranking system by including free downloads";
- game
See also: play out, think about
Type of: acquit, act, appear, apply, assume, bear, beat [informal], begin, behave, carry, compete, comport, conduct, consider, contend, create, deport, discharge, displace, do, employ, exhaust, exploit, feign, gamble, get, get down, go, hit, locomote, look, look at, make, manipulate, move, perform, recreate, re-create, seem, set about, set out, sham, simulate, sound, start, start out, take, travel, tucker [N. Amer, informal], tucker out [N. Amer, informal], use, utilise [Brit], utilize, vie, wash up, work
Encyclopedia: Played
Play, Pierre-Guillaume-Frédéric Le