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Emoji
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Word | Images | Past | Past Participle | Third Person Singular | Gerund | Meaning | Example Sentence | Example Expression | Example Expression Meaning | Synonyms | Antonyms | Collocations |
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🎩
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/ɪˈluːʒən/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a false idea or belief; a deceptive appearance
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The magician created the illusion of a floating woman. |
under an illusion |
to have a false belief or impression
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delusion, fantasy, mirage, hallucination, trick
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reality, truth
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create an illusion, optical illusion, under an illusion, shattered illusion
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🖼️
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/ˈɪl.ə.streɪt/
verb
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- •••••• |
illustrated
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illustrated
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illustrates
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illustrating
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to explain or make something clear by using examples, pictures, or comparisons
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The teacher used diagrams to illustrate the concept. |
to illustrate the point |
to make an idea clearer with an example
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explain, demonstrate, clarify, depict, exemplify
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confuse, obscure
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illustrate clearly, illustrate example, illustrate concept
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🖼️
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/ˈɪmɪdʒ/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A visual representation of something, such as a picture or likeness.
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The magazine published a clear image of the celebrity. |
public image |
the perception that people have of a person or organization
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picture, photo, likeness, representation, figure
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reality, truth
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digital image, mental image, image quality, image editing
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🎨
••••••
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/ˈɪmɪdʒəri/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
visually descriptive or figurative language, especially in a literary work
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The poet's use of imagery brought the scene to life. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
pictures, symbols, representations, depictions
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literal, plain
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vivid imagery, rich imagery, descriptive imagery
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💭
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/ɪˈmædʒɪnəbl/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Capable of being imagined or conceived.
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They offered every imaginable type of food at the festival. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
conceivable, possible, thinkable, potential
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unimaginable, inconceivable
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every imaginable, all imaginable, imaginable situation
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💭
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/ɪˈmædʒ.ɪ.nər.i/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
existing only in imagination; not real; fictional
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The child had an imaginary friend who she talked to every day. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
fictional, fantasy, make-believe, unreal
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real, actual, concrete, tangible
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imaginary friend, imaginary world, imaginary number
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🌈
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/ɪˌmædʒɪˈneɪʃən/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The ability of the mind to create ideas or pictures not present to the senses.
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Children often use their imagination while playing. |
wild imagination |
an ability to think of ideas or scenarios that are unusual or unrealistic
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creativity, fantasy, vision, invention, ingenuity
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reality, fact
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use imagination, vivid imagination, spark imagination, fertile imagination
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🤔
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/ɪˈmædʒ.ɪn/
verb
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•••••• |
imagined
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imagined
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imagines
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imagining
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to form a mental image or concept of something not present
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Close your eyes and imagine a peaceful beach. |
imagine that |
used to express surprise or disbelief
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envision, visualize, picture, dream, conceive
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ignore, dismiss
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imagine life, imagine situation, imagine future
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⚖️
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/ɪmˈbæləns/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A lack of balance; a state of inequality or disproportion.
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The imbalance of power led to conflict. |
imbalance of power |
A situation where one group holds more power than another, creating inequality.
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disproportion, inequality, instability, disparity
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balance, equality, stability
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imbalance of power, trade imbalance, hormonal imbalance
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⚖️
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/ˌɪməˈtɪəriəl/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not important or relevant; lacking physical substance.
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The judge ruled that the argument was immaterial to the case. |
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irrelevant, insignificant, unimportant, trivial, inconsequential
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relevant, significant, important
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immaterial fact, immaterial issue, immaterial evidence, considered immaterial
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🧒
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/ɪˈmætʃʊr/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
not fully developed; lacking emotional or intellectual development; childish
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His immature behavior during the meeting disappointed everyone. |
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childish, juvenile, undeveloped, infantile
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mature, developed, adult, sophisticated
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immature behavior, emotionally immature, immature attitude
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🧒
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/ˌɪməˈtjʊərəti/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state of not being fully developed emotionally, mentally, or physically; lack of maturity
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His immaturity made it difficult for him to handle responsibility. |
emotional immaturity |
lack of emotional development or control
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childishness, naivety, juvenility, irresponsibility
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maturity, adulthood, wisdom
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emotional immaturity, mental immaturity, signs of immaturity, display immaturity
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∞
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/ɪˈmeʒərəbəl/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
too large or extensive to measure; boundless
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The immeasurable love of a mother knows no bounds. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
infinite, boundless, limitless, vast
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measurable, limited, finite, bounded
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immeasurable joy, immeasurable wealth, immeasurable distance
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⚡
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/ɪˈmiːdiət/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
happening or done without delay
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The doctor gave her immediate attention. |
in the immediate future |
very soon, without delay
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instant, prompt, direct, urgent, swift
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delayed, gradual, postponed
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immediate action, immediate effect, immediate response, immediate family
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⚡
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/ɪˈmiːdiətli/
adverb
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
at once; without delay
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She responded immediately to the emergency call. |
immediately after |
right after something happens
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instantly, promptly, directly, quickly, right away
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later, eventually, afterward
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respond immediately, happen immediately, immediately after, immediately before
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🏔️
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/ɪˈmens/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
extremely large or great; huge
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The immense mountain range stretched across the horizon. |
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huge, enormous, vast, colossal
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tiny, small, minute, insignificant
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immense pressure, immense wealth, immense popularity
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🧳
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/ˈɪmɪɡrənt/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country
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The city has welcomed many new immigrants this year. |
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settler, newcomer, migrant, expatriate
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native, local
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illegal immigrant, immigrant community, immigrant worker, immigrant family
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🛂
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/ˌɪmɪˈɡreɪʃən/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the action of coming to live permanently in a foreign country
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Immigration policies vary from country to country. |
illegal immigration |
the act of entering a country without legal permission
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migration, settlement, relocation, entry
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emigration, deportation
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immigration policy, immigration law, illegal immigration, mass immigration
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⚡
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/ˈɪmɪnənt/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
About to happen; likely to occur very soon.
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Dark clouds signaled that a storm was imminent. |
imminent danger |
A threat or risk that is about to happen very soon.
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forthcoming, approaching, looming, impending, near
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distant, remote, unlikely
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imminent threat, imminent arrival, imminent danger, imminent change
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🪑
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/ɪˈmoʊbəl/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
unable to move or be moved
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After the accident, he was immobile for weeks. |
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motionless, still, stationary, inactive
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mobile, moving, active
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remain immobile, immobile state, completely immobile, become immobile
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😏
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/ɪˈmɒdɪst/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
lacking humility or decency; excessively proud or improper
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His immodest remarks offended the audience. |
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arrogant, boastful, indecent, shameless
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modest, humble, decent
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immodest behavior, immodest dress, immodest remarks, immodest attitude
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🙈
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/ɪˈmɒdəsti/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
lack of modesty or decency; behavior or attitude that is overly bold or improper
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The article was criticized for its tone of immodesty. |
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indecency, shamelessness, boldness, impropriety
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modesty, decency, humility
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act of immodesty, charge of immodesty, perceived immodesty, social immodesty
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🚫
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/ɪˈmɒrəl/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not conforming to accepted standards of morality; unethical or wicked.
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He was fired for his immoral behavior. |
immoral act |
An action that is considered wrong or unethical.
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unethical, wicked, corrupt, sinful
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moral, virtuous, ethical
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immoral behavior, immoral act, immoral lifestyle, immoral conduct
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⚠️
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/ˌɪməˈrælɪti/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the quality of being immoral; behavior that violates accepted moral standards
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The community condemned the immorality of the corrupt officials. |
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corruption, depravity, wickedness, vice, unethicality
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morality, virtue, righteousness
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moral immorality, sexual immorality, public immorality, social immorality
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♾️
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/ɪˈmɔːrtl/
adjective; noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
living forever; never dying; lasting forever in fame or memory
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Legends often describe heroes as immortal beings who never die. |
immortal fame |
fame that lasts forever
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eternal, everlasting, undying, deathless, perennial
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mortal, perishable, transient
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immortal soul, immortal being, immortal fame, immortal legend
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♾️
••••••
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/ˌɪmɔːrˈtæləti/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state of living forever; eternal life or lasting fame beyond death
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Many ancient cultures believed that heroes could achieve immortality through great deeds. |
immortality of the soul |
the belief that the soul lives forever after the body dies
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eternity, eternal life, endlessness, imperishability, perpetuity
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mortality, death, perishability
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seek immortality, achieve immortality, promise immortality, spiritual immortality
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🛡️
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/ɪˈmjuːn/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
protected from disease or from the effects of something
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Children who are vaccinated are immune to many diseases. |
immune to criticism |
not affected by criticism
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resistant, protected, safe, shielded
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vulnerable, susceptible
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immune system, immune response, immune to, immune deficiency
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💥
••••••
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/ˈɪmpækt/
noun, verb
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•••••• |
impacted
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impacted
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impacts
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impacting
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The strong effect or influence that something has on a situation or person.
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The new law had a major impact on the economy. |
make an impact |
To have a strong effect or impression on someone or something.
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effect, influence, impression, shock, consequence
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cause, source
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social impact, economic impact, environmental impact, significant impact
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⚖️
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/ɪmˈpɑːrʃəl/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
treating all sides fairly; unbiased; neutral
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A good judge must remain impartial throughout the trial. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
neutral, unbiased, fair, objective
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biased, partial, prejudiced, unfair
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impartial judge, impartial observer, impartial decision
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⏳
••••••
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/ɪmˈpeɪʃəns/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The state of being quickly irritated or unable to wait calmly.
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His impatience grew as the meeting dragged on. |
lose patience |
to become annoyed or unable to tolerate something any longer
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restlessness, irritation, eagerness, frustration
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patience, calmness, composure
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show impatience, grow in impatience, with impatience
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⏳
••••••
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/ɪmˈpeɪʃənt/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not able to wait calmly; restless and eager for something to happen.
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She grew impatient while waiting in the long queue. |
impatient to do something |
Eager and restless to start doing something quickly.
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restless, eager, anxious, irritable, hasty
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patient, calm, tolerant
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be impatient, sound impatient, impatient look, impatient sigh
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⏳
••••••
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/ɪmˈpeɪʃəntli/
adverb
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
in a manner showing annoyance or restlessness due to delay or waiting
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She tapped her fingers impatiently while waiting for the reply. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
restlessly, anxiously, irritably, hastily, eagerly
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patiently, calmly, placidly
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wait impatiently, look impatiently, tap impatiently, speak impatiently
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🌱
••••••
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/ɪmˈpɜːrfɪkt/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not perfect; having faults or flaws.
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The painting was beautiful despite being imperfect. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
flawed, defective, incomplete, faulty, blemished
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perfect, flawless, complete
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imperfect system, imperfect knowledge, imperfect solution, imperfect world
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🔍
••••••
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/ˌɪmpərˈfɛkʃən/
noun
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a flaw, defect, or weakness; the state of being imperfect
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She accepted her imperfection as part of being human. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
flaw, defect, weakness, blemish, fault
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perfection, flawlessness, completeness
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human imperfection, minor imperfection, structural imperfection, accept imperfection
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⚙️
••••••
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/ˈɪmplɪˌmɛnt/
verb
••••••
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•••••• |
implemented
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implemented
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implements
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implementing
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To put a decision, plan, or agreement into effect.
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The government decided to implement new health policies. |
implement a plan |
To carry out a plan in practice.
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execute, apply, enforce, realize, perform
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neglect, ignore, abandon
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implement a policy, implement changes, implement strategy, implement decision
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⚙️
••••••
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/ˌɪmplɪmenˈteɪʃən/
noun
••••••
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•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the process of putting a plan, decision, or idea into effect
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The successful implementation of the new policy improved efficiency. |
plan implementation |
the act of executing a planned action
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execution, application, realization, deployment, enforcement
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delay, neglect, failure
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policy implementation, project implementation, implementation phase, strategy implementation
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📌
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/ˌɪmplɪˈkeɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A possible effect or result of an action or decision; something suggested without being stated directly.
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The new law has serious implications for small businesses. |
by implication |
Indirectly or by consequence.
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consequence, result, suggestion, inference, indication
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explicit statement, directness
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serious implications, social implications, political implications, economic implications
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💡
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/ɪmˈplaɪ/
verb
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- •••••• |
implied
••••••
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implied
••••••
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implies
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implying
••••••
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To suggest something without directly stating it.
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Her tone seemed to imply that she was upset. |
imply meaning |
To indicate or suggest what something means indirectly.
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suggest, indicate, hint, signify
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state, declare, express
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imply strongly, imply indirectly, imply something
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|
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🙅
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/ˌɪmpəˈlaɪt/
adjective
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- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not showing good manners; rude.
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It is impolite to interrupt someone while they are speaking. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
rude, disrespectful, discourteous, ill-mannered, inconsiderate
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polite, courteous, respectful
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|
impolite remark, impolite behavior, impolite tone, impolite gesture
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|
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🙄
••••••
|
/ɪmˈpɒlɪtli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
in a rude or discourteous manner; without showing respect or proper manners
••••••
|
He spoke impolitely to the waiter despite the polite service. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
rudely, discourteously, ungraciously, impudently, bluntly
••••••
|
politely, courteously, respectfully
••••••
|
speak impolitely, behave impolitely, respond impolitely, act impolitely
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|
|
😒
••••••
|
/ɪmˈpɒlɪtnəs/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
lack of good manners or courtesy; rude behavior
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|
His impoliteness towards the guests shocked everyone. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
rudeness, discourtesy, disrespect, incivility, impertinence
••••••
|
politeness, courtesy, civility
••••••
|
act of impoliteness, social impoliteness, perceived impoliteness
••••••
|
|
📦
••••••
|
/ˈɪmpɔːrt/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
imported
••••••
|
imported
••••••
|
imports
••••••
|
importing
••••••
|
To bring goods or services into a country from abroad for sale
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|
Bangladesh imports machinery from many countries. |
import duty |
a tax imposed on goods brought into a country
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|
bring in, ship in, trade, purchase, transport
••••••
|
export, send out, sell abroad
••••••
|
import goods, import products, import services, import duty
••••••
|
|
⭐
••••••
|
/ɪmˈpɔːrtəns/
noun
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state or fact of being of great significance or value
••••••
|
She stressed the importance of honesty in all relationships. |
of great importance |
extremely valuable or significant
••••••
|
significance, value, weight, relevance, consequence
••••••
|
insignificance, unimportance
••••••
|
stress importance, highlight importance, importance of education, importance of health
••••••
|
|
⭐
••••••
|
/ɪmˈpɔːrtənt/
adjective
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Having great significance or value.
••••••
|
It is important to stay hydrated during summer. |
important role |
a crucial part in a process or situation
••••••
|
significant, vital, crucial, essential, meaningful
••••••
|
unimportant, trivial, minor
••••••
|
important decision, important role, important factor, important issue
••••••
|
|
⚡
••••••
|
/ɪmˈpɔːtəntli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
in a way that is of great significance or value
••••••
|
Importantly, the report highlights the need for immediate action. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
significantly, notably, crucially, essentially, vitally
••••••
|
insignificantly, trivially, unimportantly
••••••
|
importantly, more importantly, very importantly, most importantly
••••••
|
|
📜
••••••
|
/ɪmˈpoʊz/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
imposed
••••••
|
imposed
••••••
|
imposes
••••••
|
imposing
••••••
|
to force something to be accepted or done
••••••
|
The government decided to impose new taxes. |
impose a ban |
to officially prohibit something
••••••
|
enforce, inflict, apply, establish, dictate
••••••
|
lift, remove, withdraw
••••••
|
impose rules, impose restrictions, impose sanctions, impose fines
••••••
|
|
🚫
••••••
|
/ɪmˌpɒsəˈbɪlɪti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state or fact of being impossible; something that cannot be done or achieved
••••••
|
Finishing the project in one day was an impossibility. |
an utter impossibility |
something that is completely impossible
••••••
|
impracticability, unfeasibility, infeasibility, hopelessness
••••••
|
possibility, feasibility, likelihood
••••••
|
sheer impossibility, practical impossibility, absolute impossibility
••••••
|
|
🚫
••••••
|
/ɪmˈpɑːsəbl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
not able to occur, exist, or be done
••••••
|
It is impossible to finish this work in one day. |
nothing is impossible |
everything can be achieved with effort
••••••
|
unachievable, unattainable, hopeless, impracticable
••••••
|
possible, achievable, feasible
••••••
|
seem impossible, make impossible, impossible task, impossible mission
••••••
|
|
✨
••••••
|
/ɪmˈprɛs/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
impressed
••••••
|
impressed
••••••
|
impresses
••••••
|
impressing
••••••
|
to cause someone to feel admiration or respect
••••••
|
Her speech managed to impress the audience. |
make an impression |
to have a strong effect on someone
••••••
|
amaze, astonish, inspire, move, influence
••••••
|
bore, disappoint, discourage
••••••
|
impress deeply, impress someone, impress with, fail to impress
••••••
|
|
🖼️
••••••
|
/ɪmˈprɛʃən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
an idea, feeling, or opinion about something or someone
••••••
|
The book gave me a good first impression. |
leave an impression |
to have a lasting effect on someone
••••••
|
impact, effect, influence, perception, opinion
••••••
|
ignorance, indifference
••••••
|
first impression, strong impression, lasting impression, overall impression
••••••
|