| • | To cause to move upward or onward by a lifting effort; to
   lift; to raise; to hoist; -- often with up; as, the wave heaved the
   boat on land. | 
											
															| • | To throw; to cast; -- obsolete, provincial, or
   colloquial, except in certain nautical phrases; as, to heave the lead;
   to heave the log. | 
											
															| • | To force from, or into, any position; to cause to move;
   also, to throw off; -- mostly used in certain nautical phrases; as, to
   heave the ship ahead. | 
											
															| • | To raise or force from the breast; to utter with effort;
   as, to heave a sigh. | 
											
															| • | To cause to swell or rise, as the breast or bosom. | 
											
															| • | To be thrown up or raised; to rise upward, as a tower or
   mound. | 
											
															| • | To rise and fall with alternate motions, as the lungs in
   heavy breathing, as waves in a heavy sea, as ships on the billows, as
   the earth when broken up by frost, etc.; to swell; to dilate; to
   expand; to distend; hence, to labor; to struggle. | 
											
															| • | To make an effort to raise, throw, or move anything; to
   strain to do something difficult. | 
											
															| • | To make an effort to vomit; to retch; to vomit. | 
											
															| • | An effort to raise something, as a weight, or one's self, or
   to move something heavy. | 
											
															| • | An upward motion; a rising; a swell or distention, as of the
   breast in difficult breathing, of the waves, of the earth in an
   earthquake, and the like. | 
											
															| • | A horizontal dislocation in a metallic lode, taking place at
   an intersection with another lode. |