Etymology
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From wide + -en (verbal suffix).
Verb
widen (third-person singular simple present widens, present participle widening, simple past and past participle widened)
- (intransitive) To become wide or wider.
His eyes widened as her negligee fell to the floor.
- (transitive) To make wide or wider.
2011 September 29, Tom Rostance, “Stoke 2 - 1 Besiktas”, in BBC Sport:But he still saw his side produce a rousing display which owed much to their lauded prowess from set-pieces, despite Uefa regulations meaning the pitch had to be widened and, in the process, the run-up area for Delap's long throws reduced.
- (transitive) To let out clothes to a larger size.
She widened his trousers for him.
- (transitive) To broaden or extend in scope or range.
1976 December 18, “Connecticut Task”, in Gay Community News, volume 4, number 25, page 2:While the primary focus of the Sexual Orientation Committee had been to lobby for gay rights legislation, the new Task Force hopes to widen its activities. The Task Force ― in addition to lobbying — hopes to function as an "umbrella organization," facilitating communication between the state's many gay groups.
2007 August 6, Leslie Feinberg, “Cuba's CENESEX proposes ground-breaking transsexual rights”, in Workers World:Correspondent Gerardo Arreola interviewed Castro Espín for the Jan. 9, 2006, issue of La Jornada about the move to widen rights for transsexuals.
The police widened their enquiries.
- (transitive, programming) To convert to a data type that can hold a larger number of distinct values.
- Antonym: narrow
- to widen a
short
variable to an int
variable