| deep [a] |
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| 1) | relatively deep or strong; affecting one deeply; "a deep breath"; "a deep sigh"; "deep concentration"; "deep emotion"; "a deep trance"; "in a deep sleep" |
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| heavy profound depth shallow |
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| 2) | marked by depth of thinking; "deep thoughts"; "a deep allegory" |
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| profound |
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| 3) | having great spatial extension or penetration downward or inward from an outer surface or backward or laterally or outward from a center; sometimes used in combination; "a deep well"; "a deep dive"; "deep water"; "a deep casserole"; "a deep gash"; "deep massage"; "deep pressure receptors in muscles"; "deep shelves"; "a deep closet"; "surrounded by a deep yard"; "hit the ball to deep center field"; "in deep space"; "waist-deep" |
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| abysmal bottomless deep-water in_depth profound walk-in unfathomable depth shallow |
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| 4) | very distant in time or space; "deep in the past"; "deep in enemy territory"; "deep in the woods"; "a deep space probe" |
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| distant |
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| 5) | extreme; "in deep trouble"; "deep happiness" |
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| intense |
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| 6) | having or denoting a low vocal or instrumental range; "a deep voice"; "a bass voice is lower than a baritone voice"; "a bass clarinet" |
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| Synonyms : | bass |
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| low |
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| 7) | strong; intense; "deep purple"; "a rich red" |
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| Synonyms : | rich |
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| colorful |
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| 8) | relatively thick from top to bottom; "deep carpets"; "deep snow" |
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| thick |
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| 9) | extending relatively far inward; "a deep border" |
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| broad |
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| 10) | (of darkness) very intense; "thick night"; "thick darkness"; "a face in deep shadow"; "deep night" |
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| Synonyms : | thick |
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| intense |
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| 11) | large in quantity or size; "deep cuts in the budget" |
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| big |
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| 12) | with head or back bent low; "a deep bow" |
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| low |
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| 13) | of an obscure nature; "the new insurance policy is written without cryptic or mysterious terms"; "a deep dark secret"; "the inscrutible workings of Providence"; "in its mysterious past it encompasses all the dim origins of life"- Rachel Carson; "rituals totally mystifying to visitors from other lands" |
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| Synonyms : | cryptic cryptical inscrutable mysterious mystifying |
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| incomprehensible |
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| 14) | difficult to penetrate; incomprehensible to one of ordinary understanding or knowledge; "the professor's lectures were so abstruse that students tended to avoid them"; "a deep metaphysical theory"; "some recondite problem in historiography" |
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| Synonyms : | abstruse recondite |
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| esoteric |
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| 15) | exhibiting great cunning usually with secrecy; "deep political machinations"; "a deep plot" |
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| artful |
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| deep [r] |
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| 1) | to a great depth; "dived deeply"; "dug deep" |
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| Synonyms : | deeply |
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| 2) | to an advanced time; "deep into the night"; "talked late into the evening" |
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| Synonyms : | late |
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| 3) | to far into space; "penetrated deep into enemy territory"; "went deep into the woods"; |
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| deep [n] |
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| 1) | the central and most intense or profound part; "in the deep of night"; "in the deep of winter" |
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| middle |
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| 2) | a long steep-sided depression in the ocean floor |
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| Synonyms : | oceanic_abyss trench |
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| depression atacama_trench bougainville_trench japan_trench nares_deep |
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| 3) | literary term for an ocean; "denizens of the deep" |
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| ocean |
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