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  1. to take or try to take hold of something or someone tightly, usually in fear, worry, or pain: clutch onto Silent and pale, she clutched onto her mother's hand. clutch something to something Clutching the money to his chest, he hurried to the bank. He collapsed, clutching his stomach. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples.

  2. The meaning of CLUTCH is to grasp or hold with or as if with the hand or claws usually strongly, tightly, or suddenly. How to use clutch in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Clutch.

  3. CLUTCH definition: 1. to take or try to take hold of something or someone tightly, usually in fear, worry, or pain…. Learn more.

  4. to take or try to take hold of something or someone tightly, usually in fear, worry, or pain: clutch onto Silent and pale, she clutched onto her mother's hand. clutch something to something Clutching the money to his chest, he hurried to the bank. He collapsed, clutching his stomach.

  5. adj. Informal. 1. Being or occurring in a tense or critical situation: won the championship by sinking a clutch putt. 2. Tending to be successful in tense or critical situations: The coach relied on her clutch pitcher. Idiom: clutchat straws.

  6. noun. the hand, claw, etc., when grasping. Usually clutches. power of disposal or control; mastery: She fell into the clutches of the enemy. the act of clutching; a snatch or grasp. a tight grip or hold. a device for gripping something. Automotive, Machinery.

  7. To clutch is to grasp or hold on to tightly. Some people clutch the safety bar on the roller coaster for dear life; others throw their hands in the air. As a noun, clutch has many meanings: a brood of chickens, a strapless purse, the extra pedal in a stick-shift car.

  8. Definition of clutch verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. clutch to hold something or someone tightly, especially in your hand; to take hold of something suddenly: She stood there, the flowers still clutched in her hand. He felt himself slipping and clutched at a branch.

  10. If you clutch at something or clutch something, you hold it tightly, usually because you are afraid or anxious.