Dictionary
sus•pend
Pronunciation: (su-spend'), [key]—
v.t.
1. to hang by attachment to something above:
to suspend a chandelier from the ceiling.
2. to attach so as to allow free movement:
to suspend a door on a hinge.
3. to keep from falling, sinking, forming a deposit, etc., as if by hanging:
to suspend solid particles in a liquid.
4. to hold or keep undetermined; refrain from forming or concluding definitely:
to suspend one's judgment.
5. to defer or postpone:
to suspend sentence on a convicted person.
6. to cause to cease or bring to a stop or stay, usually for a time:
to suspend payment.
7. to cause to cease for a time from operation or effect, as a law, rule, privilege, service, or the like:
to suspend ferry service.
8. to debar, usually for a limited time, from the exercise of an office or function or the enjoyment of a privilege:
The student was suspended from school.
9. to keep in a mood or feeling of expectation or incompleteness; keep waiting in suspense:
Finish the story; don't suspend us in midair.
10. Music.to prolong (a note or tone) into the next chord.
—
v.i.
1. to come to a stop, usually temporarily; cease from operation for a time.
2. to stop payment; be unable to meet financial obligations.
3. to hang or be suspended, as from another object:
The chandelier suspends from the ceiling.
4. to be suspended, as in a liquid, gas, etc.
Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Copyright © 1997, by Random House, Inc., on Infoplease.