WordDisk
  • Reading
    • Shortcuts
      •   Home
      •   All Articles
      •   Read from Another Site
      Sources
      • Wikipedia
      • Simple Wikipedia
      • VOA Learning English
      • Futurity
      • The Conversation
      • MIT News
      • Harvard Gazette
      • Cambridge News
      • YDS/YÖKDİL Passages
      Topics
      • Technology
      • Engineering
      • Business
      • Economics
      • Human
      • Health
      • Energy
      • Biology
      • Nature
      • Space
  •  Log in
  •  Sign up
4.54
History
Add

scheme noun [ skiːm ]

• a large-scale systematic plan or arrangement for attaining a particular object or putting a particular idea into effect.
• "the occupational sick pay scheme"
Similar: plan, project, plan of action, programme, strategy, stratagem, game plan, enterprise, venture, measure, move, course of action, line of action, system, procedure, design, formula, recipe, device, tactic, contrivance, proposal, proposition, suggestion, idea, blueprint, wheeze, lurk, shift,
• an estate of social housing.
• "the whole scheme is plunged into darkness, bar the light in Victor's house"

scheme verb

• make plans, especially in a devious way or with intent to do something illegal or wrong.
Similar: plot, hatch a plot, conspire, take part in a conspiracy, intrigue, connive, manoeuvre, plan, lay plans, machinate, cabal, complot,
• arrange according to a colour scheme.
• "she was busy arranging flowers, scheming the candles and napkins"
Origin: mid 16th century (denoting a figure of speech): from Latin schema, from Greek (see schema). An early sense was ‘diagram of the position of celestial objects’, giving rise to ‘diagram, outline’, whence the current senses. The unfavourable notion ‘plot’ arose in the mid 18th century.

the scheme of things

• a supposed or apparent overall system, within which everything has a place and in relation to which individual details are ultimately to be assessed.
"in the overall scheme of things, we didn't do badly"



2025 WordDisk