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  1. Dictionary
    cherish
    /ˈtʃɛrɪʃ/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to love, protect, and care for someone or something that is important to you: Although I cherish my children, I do allow them their independence. Her most cherished possession is a 1926 letter from F. Scott Fitzgerald. Freedom of speech is a cherished (= carefully protected) right in this country.

  3. The meaning of CHERISH is to hold dear : feel or show affection for. How to use cherish in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Cherish.

  4. CHERISH meaning: 1. to love, protect, and care for someone or something that is important to you: 2. to keep hopes…. Learn more.

  5. Cherish, foster, harbor imply giving affection, care, or shelter to something. Cherish suggests regarding or treating something as an object of affection or as valuable: to cherish a friendship.

  6. Cherish means to treasureto hold or treat something as dear and often loved. The word implies a deep and active appreciation of the person or thing that’s cherished. The word is especially applied to loved ones, relationships, and fond memories of the time spent with such people.

  7. CHERISH definition: 1. to love someone or something very much and take care of them 2. If you cherish an idea, hope…. Learn more.

  8. If you cherish something such as a hope or a pleasant memory, you keep it in your mind for a long period of time. The president will cherish the memory of this visit. American English : cherish / tˈʃɛrɪʃ /

  9. To cherish something is to care for it deeply, to treasure it, like the way you cherish the time you spend with a favorite person you don't see often. The verb cherish is related to words that mean “costly” and “beloved.”

  10. cherish something to keep an idea, a hope or a pleasant feeling in your mind for a long time. Cherish the memory of those days in Paris. He cherishes the hope that one day they will meet again.

  11. 1. To treat with affection and tenderness; hold dear: cherish one's family; fine rugs that are cherished by their owners. 2. To keep fondly in mind; treasure: cherish a memory. See Synonyms at appreciate. [Middle English cherishen, from Old French cherir, cheriss-, from cher, dear, from Latin cārus; see kā- in Indo-European roots .]