load
A load is a heavy thing you carry, or the action of putting things into a container.
Explanation at your level:
A load is a group of things. You carry a load of books. You load a bag with clothes. It is a very useful word for daily life.
You use load when you put things into a machine or a car. 'Please load the dishwasher.' It is also a noun for the things you carry. 'That is a heavy load for you.'
At this level, you use load for work tasks. 'My workload is very high this week.' You can also use it to describe stress: 'I have a load of things to do today.' It is common in both work and home life.
You can use load figuratively. 'That is a load of nonsense' means you do not believe someone. You can also 'load' software onto a computer, which is a specific technical usage common in modern business environments.
In advanced contexts, load refers to capacity. 'The bridge collapsed under the load.' It also appears in computing: 'The server is under a heavy load.' Understanding the nuance between physical weight and system pressure is key here.
At the mastery level, consider the etymological connection to 'lode' or 'way.' You might see it in literary contexts describing a 'load of grief' or 'load of responsibility.' It represents the burden of existence and the weight of history.
Wort in 30 Sekunden
- Load is both a noun (weight) and a verb (to fill).
- It is a versatile word used in work, home, and tech.
- It rhymes with road and code.
- Commonly used in idioms like 'a load off my mind'.
Hey there! Let's talk about the word load. It is one of those super versatile words we use every single day. Think of it as anything that has weight or needs to be moved from point A to point B.
When you are a noun, a load is the actual pile of stuff. Imagine you are helping a friend move; the boxes in your arms are your load. It implies effort because it has weight.
As a verb, load is the action. You load the dishwasher with dirty plates or load a truck with furniture. It is all about filling up a space until it is ready to go!
The word load has deep roots in Old English, coming from the word lad, which meant 'a way, journey, or carrying.' It is related to the word lode, which you might know from 'motherlode'—a vein of metal ore.
Historically, it was tied to the idea of a 'way' or a 'course.' Over centuries, the meaning shifted from the journey itself to the things being carried on that journey. It is a cousin to words like lead (as in to guide) because both involve moving something forward.
It is fascinating how a word for a 'path' became a word for 'weight.' It shows how our ancestors viewed carrying goods as an essential part of traveling along a road.
You will hear load in almost every setting. In a casual sense, we say 'a load of fun' to mean a lot of something. In a technical sense, engineers talk about the load a bridge can support.
Common pairings include heavy load, work load, and load up. If you are in a professional setting, you might discuss your workload, which is a compound word meaning all the tasks you have to finish.
Remember that load can be physical (like a backpack) or abstract (like stress). You can have a load on your mind, which means you are feeling worried about many things at once.
Idioms make language colorful! Here are five ways to use load: 1. A load off my mind: Feeling relieved after sharing a worry. 2. Load the dice: To cheat or rig a situation. 3. Get a load of this: A casual way to say 'look at this.' 4. Take a load off: To sit down and relax. 5. A load of rubbish: Saying something is complete nonsense.
The word load is a regular verb. You conjugate it as loads, loading, and loaded. As a noun, it is countable, so you can have one load or two loads of laundry.
Pronunciation is straightforward: it rhymes with road, toad, and code. The IPA is /loʊd/. In both British and American English, the 'oa' makes a long 'o' sound.
Be careful not to confuse it with lode (a mineral deposit) or lowed (the sound a cow makes). They sound exactly the same, which makes them homophones!
Fun Fact
It is related to the word 'lode' which refers to a path or vein of ore.
Pronunciation Guide
Long o sound
Long o sound
Common Errors
- pronouncing 'oa' as 'ah'
- forgetting the 'd' at the end
- rhyming with 'loud'
Rhymes With
Difficulty Rating
Easy
Moderate
Moderate
Easy
What to Learn Next
Prerequisites
Learn Next
Fortgeschritten
Grammar to Know
Transitive Verbs
I load the box.
Countable Nouns
Two loads.
Homophones
Load/Lode.
Examples by Level
I have a load of books.
I have many books.
Noun usage.
Load the car.
Put things in the car.
Verb usage.
It is a big load.
It is heavy.
Noun usage.
Load the truck.
Fill the truck.
Verb usage.
One load of laundry.
One wash cycle.
Countable noun.
Do not load it.
Do not fill it.
Negative verb.
He has a load.
He is carrying something.
Simple sentence.
Load the game.
Start the game.
Technical verb.
Load the dishwasher now.
That is a heavy load.
I have a load of homework.
Load the boxes carefully.
She carried a load of wood.
The truck has a full load.
Can you load the software?
It is a light load.
My workload is increasing.
The system is loading slowly.
That is a load of rubbish.
He took a load off his feet.
The ship carries a heavy load.
Load the data into the file.
I feel like a load off my mind.
The bridge reached its load limit.
The server is under heavy load.
Don't load the dice in your favor.
He is carrying a heavy emotional load.
The software failed to load properly.
She has a load of experience.
The truck was loaded with supplies.
The argument was a load of nonsense.
We need to lighten the load.
The structural load of the building is critical.
He is loading the conversation with bias.
The program loaded successfully into memory.
The burden of the load was too much.
He is under a heavy load of responsibility.
The data load is too large for the cache.
The ship's load was distributed evenly.
She loaded the gun with precision.
The existential load of his past choices.
The rhetorical load of the speech was immense.
The system is designed to handle a peak load.
He loaded his words with hidden meaning.
The ship was laden with a heavy load.
The administrative load is stifling innovation.
The cognitive load of the task is high.
The load-bearing wall is essential.
Häufige Kollokationen
Idioms & Expressions
"a load off my mind"
relief from worry
Telling her was a load off my mind.
casual"load the dice"
to rig a situation
He loaded the dice to win.
formal"get a load of this"
look at this
Get a load of this new car!
slang"take a load off"
sit down and rest
Come in and take a load off.
casual"a load of rubbish"
complete nonsense
His excuse was a load of rubbish.
casual"load up on"
to get a large amount of something
We should load up on supplies.
casualEasily Confused
homophone
minerals vs weight
The lode of gold vs the load of wood.
homophone
cow sound vs weight
The cow lowed loudly.
adjective form
past participle vs noun
The gun was loaded.
opposite
removing vs adding
Unload the truck.
Sentence Patterns
Subject + load + object + with + noun
I loaded the truck with boxes.
Subject + take + a + load + off
Take a load off your feet.
Subject + have + a + load + of
I have a load of work.
Subject + be + a + load + of + noun
That is a load of nonsense.
Subject + load + software
I need to load the game.
Wortfamilie
Nouns
Verbs
Adjectives
Verwandt
How to Use It
9
Formality Scale
Häufige Fehler
Lode is for minerals, load is for weight.
It is countable when referring to items.
Lowed is the past of moo.
Load is transitive.
Load implies weight.
Tips
Memory Palace
Imagine a giant truck in your living room.
Native usage
Use 'a load of' for large amounts.
Cultural insight
Used often in shipping/transport.
Grammar shortcut
It follows standard verb rules.
Say it right
Long O sound.
Don't confuse
Lode vs Load.
Did you know?
Related to 'way'.
Study smart
Use it in sentences about your day.
Casual tip
Use 'a load of' instead of 'many'.
Pluralization
Add 's' for plural.
Memorize It
Mnemonic
LOAD: L-ift O-bjects A-nd D-eliver
Visual Association
A truck overflowing with boxes.
Word Web
Herausforderung
Describe a time you felt a 'load' off your mind.
Wortherkunft
Old English
Original meaning: way, journey
Kultureller Kontext
None
Commonly used in logistics and daily chores.
Practice in Real Life
Real-World Contexts
at work
- manage workload
- heavy load
- load the server
at home
- load the dishwasher
- load the laundry
- lighten the load
travel
- load the car
- baggage load
- load limit
computing
- load data
- system load
- load time
Conversation Starters
"What is the heaviest load you have ever carried?"
"Do you have a heavy workload this week?"
"How do you feel when you finally take a load off?"
"Have you ever heard someone call an idea a 'load of rubbish'?"
"What is the most annoying thing to load into a car?"
Journal Prompts
Describe a time you felt a literal load was too heavy.
Write about a time you felt a metaphorical 'load' was lifted from your mind.
If you had to load a truck for a long journey, what three things would you take?
Discuss why people use the phrase 'load of rubbish' to describe ideas.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
8 FragenIt is both.
Loaded.
The amount of work to do.
Usually for objects, but metaphorically for stress.
Road, code, mode.
Yes, loads.
To cheat.
It depends on the context.
Teste dich selbst
Please ___ the truck.
Load means to fill.
Which is a heavy load?
Rocks are heavy.
Is a workload about your job?
Yes, it is the amount of work.
Word
Bedeutung
Opposite actions.
Load the truck.
The server is under a heavy ___.
Technical usage.
What is a load-bearing wall?
Structural term.
Does 'load the dice' mean to be fair?
It means to cheat.
Word
Bedeutung
Direct opposites.
This is a load off my mind.
Ergebnis: /10
Summary
A load is simply something heavy you carry or the action of filling a space.
- Load is both a noun (weight) and a verb (to fill).
- It is a versatile word used in work, home, and tech.
- It rhymes with road and code.
- Commonly used in idioms like 'a load off my mind'.
Memory Palace
Imagine a giant truck in your living room.
Native usage
Use 'a load of' for large amounts.
Cultural insight
Used often in shipping/transport.
Grammar shortcut
It follows standard verb rules.