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Past
Past Participle
Third Person Singular
Gerund
Meaning
Example Sentence
Example Sentence Translation
Synonyms
Antonyms
Collocations
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Word
Lesson 55 - Mask Toggle
|
Emoji
|
Word | Images | Past | Past Participle | Third Person Singular | Gerund | Meaning | Example Sentence | Example Expression | Example Expression Meaning | Synonyms | Antonyms | Collocations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
#2612
👏
|
/ɪmˈpres.ɪv/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
striking; remarkable; having the ability to impress
••••••
|
Her impressive performance earned her a standing ovation. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
remarkable, striking, outstanding, magnificent
••••••
|
unimpressive, ordinary, mediocre, disappointing
••••••
|
impressive performance, impressive results, impressive achievement
••••••
|
|
#2613
🔒
|
/ɪmˈprɪzən/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
imprisoned
••••••
|
imprisoned
••••••
|
imprisons
••••••
|
imprisoning
••••••
|
to put someone in prison; to confine or restrict someone's freedom
••••••
|
The judge imprisoned the criminal for five years. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
jail, incarcerate, confine, detain
••••••
|
free, release, liberate, discharge
••••••
|
imprison someone, falsely imprison, imprison for life, maximum security prison
••••••
|
|
#2614
🔒
|
/ɪmˈprɪzənmənt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the act of putting someone in prison; the state of being confined as punishment
••••••
|
He faced imprisonment for violating the court order. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
incarceration, confinement, detention, custody, captivity
••••••
|
freedom, release, liberty
••••••
|
term of imprisonment, life imprisonment, imprisonment sentence, face imprisonment
••••••
|
|
#2615
❌
|
/ɪmˈprɒp.ər/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
inappropriate; incorrect; not suitable
••••••
|
It would be improper to discuss personal matters in a business meeting. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
inappropriate, incorrect, unsuitable, wrong
••••••
|
proper, appropriate, correct, suitable
••••••
|
improper conduct, improper behavior, improper use
••••••
|
|
#2616
📈
|
/ɪmˈpruːv/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
improved
••••••
|
improved
••••••
|
improves
••••••
|
improving
••••••
|
to make something better or become better
••••••
|
Regular practice will improve your skills. |
room for improvement |
a possibility or need for something to be made better
••••••
|
enhance, develop, refine, upgrade, boost
••••••
|
worsen, decline, degrade
••••••
|
improve performance, improve quality, improve skills, continuously improve
••••••
|
|
#2617
🔧
|
/ɪmˈpruːvmənt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the act of making something better
••••••
|
There has been a significant improvement in his health. |
continuous improvement |
the ongoing effort to make things better
••••••
|
progress, enhancement, advancement, growth, development
••••••
|
decline, deterioration, regression
••••••
|
health improvement, significant improvement, gradual improvement, scope for improvement
••••••
|
|
#2618
💧
|
/ɪmˈpjʊər/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
contaminated; not clean; mixed with foreign substances
••••••
|
The impure water caused health problems in the village. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
contaminated, polluted, dirty, tainted
••••••
|
pure, clean, uncontaminated, pristine
••••••
|
impure water, impure substances, impure thoughts
••••••
|
|
#2619
🧪
|
/ɪmˈpjʊərəti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state of being unclean or contaminated; a substance that makes something impure
••••••
|
The scientist removed every impurity from the water sample. |
impurity level |
the amount of unwanted or harmful substances present
••••••
|
contamination, pollution, taint, adulteration, blemish
••••••
|
purity, cleanliness, refinement
••••••
|
chemical impurity, impurity level, trace impurity, remove impurity, impurity content
••••••
|
|
#2620
📍
|
/ɪn/
preposition
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
expressing the situation of being enclosed or surrounded by something
••••••
|
She is in the kitchen preparing dinner. |
in trouble |
to be in a difficult or problematic situation
••••••
|
inside, within, enclosed, into, surrounded
••••••
|
out, outside
••••••
|
in fact, in time, in charge, in need
••••••
|
|
#2621
🚫
|
/ˌɪnəˈbɪləti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state of being unable to do something
••••••
|
His inability to make decisions affected his career. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
incapacity, weakness, inability, powerlessness
••••••
|
ability, strength
••••••
|
physical inability, inability to act, inability to speak
••••••
|
|
#2622
❌
|
/ɪnˈækjʊrəsi/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
lack of accuracy or precision; an incorrect or wrong detail
••••••
|
The report contained several factual inaccuracies. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
error, imprecision, mistake, incorrectness, fault
••••••
|
accuracy, precision, correctness
••••••
|
factual inaccuracy, minor inaccuracy, data inaccuracy, measurement inaccuracy
••••••
|
|
#2623
❌
|
/ɪnˈækjʊrət/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not correct, precise, or exact; containing errors.
••••••
|
The report was full of inaccurate data. |
inaccurate statement |
A statement that contains errors or is not correct.
••••••
|
incorrect, false, erroneous, imprecise, faulty
••••••
|
accurate, correct, precise
••••••
|
inaccurate report, inaccurate figures, inaccurate description, highly inaccurate
••••••
|
|
#2624
🛑
|
/ɪnˈæktɪv/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not engaging in activity; not active.
••••••
|
The account has been inactive for six months. |
inactive lifestyle |
A way of living with little or no physical activity.
••••••
|
dormant, idle, passive, sluggish, stagnant
••••••
|
active, energetic, lively
••••••
|
inactive account, inactive period, inactive member, inactive role
••••••
|
|
#2625
🛑
|
/ˌɪnækˈtɪvɪti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state of not being active physically or mentally; lack of action
••••••
|
Prolonged inactivity can negatively affect both physical and mental health. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
idleness, passivity, dormancy, stagnation, inertia
••••••
|
activity, movement, action
••••••
|
prolonged inactivity, physical inactivity, period of inactivity, economic inactivity
••••••
|
|
#2626
😔
|
/ɪnˈædɪkwəsi/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
lack of sufficient ability, quality, or strength; a feeling of not being good enough
••••••
|
She struggled with feelings of inadequacy at work despite her strong qualifications. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
insufficiency, deficiency, incompetence, weakness, inadequateness
••••••
|
adequacy, sufficiency, competence
••••••
|
feelings of inadequacy, sense of inadequacy, emotional inadequacy, professional inadequacy
••••••
|
|
#2627
⚠️
|
/ɪnˈædɪkwət/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not sufficient or good enough.
••••••
|
The funding was inadequate to complete the project. |
inadequate resources |
Not enough resources to meet requirements.
••••••
|
insufficient, deficient, lacking, meager, incomplete
••••••
|
adequate, sufficient, enough
••••••
|
inadequate funding, inadequate resources, inadequate support, inadequate system
••••••
|
|
#2628
🚫
|
/ˌɪnəˈproʊpriət/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
not suitable or proper in the circumstances
••••••
|
It was inappropriate to talk loudly in the library. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
unsuitable, improper, unfit, offensive
••••••
|
appropriate, suitable
••••••
|
inappropriate behavior, inappropriate dress, inappropriate comment
••••••
|
|
#2629
😕
|
/ˌɪnəˈtɛntɪv/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
not paying attention; lacking focus or concentration
••••••
|
The inattentive student missed several important instructions. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
careless, distracted, heedless, absent-minded, unobservant
••••••
|
attentive, alert, focused
••••••
|
inattentive student, inattentive behavior, inattentive driving, inattentive listening
••••••
|
|
#2630
🚫
|
/ˌɪnˌkeɪpəˈbɪləti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
lack of ability or power to do something; inability or incompetence
••••••
|
His incapability to manage the team led to serious problems. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
inability, incompetence, incapacity, weakness, inadequacy
••••••
|
ability, capability, competence
••••••
|
mental incapability, physical incapability, show incapability, incapability to perform
••••••
|
|
#2631
🚫
|
/ɪnˈkeɪpəbəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
lacking the ability, skill, or capacity to do something
••••••
|
He is incapable of understanding complex instructions. |
incapable of |
not having the ability to do something
••••••
|
unable, incompetent, powerless, unfit, inept
••••••
|
capable, able, competent
••••••
|
incapable of doing, mentally incapable, physically incapable, proven incapable
••••••
|
|
#2632
🚫
|
/ˌɪnkəˈpæsəti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the lack of ability, power, or fitness to do something
••••••
|
His mental incapacity prevented him from making important decisions. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
inability, incompetence, disability, weakness
••••••
|
ability, competence, capability
••••••
|
legal incapacity, physical incapacity, mental incapacity, incapacity to work
••••••
|
|
#2633
🎁
|
/ɪnˈsɛntɪv/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a thing that motivates or encourages someone to do something
••••••
|
The company offers bonuses as an incentive to increase productivity. |
carrot and stick |
a method involving both rewards and punishments to induce behavior
••••••
|
motivation, encouragement, inducement, stimulus, reward
••••••
|
discouragement, deterrent
••••••
|
provide incentive, financial incentive, incentive program, strong incentive
••••••
|
|
#2634
📊
|
/ˈɪnsɪdəns/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the occurrence, rate, or frequency of something
••••••
|
The incidence of road accidents has decreased this year. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
occurrence, frequency, rate, prevalence, proportion
••••••
|
absence, scarcity, rarity
••••••
|
incidence of disease, high incidence, incidence rate, incidence angle
••••••
|
|
#2635
🚨
|
/ˈɪnsɪdənt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
an event or occurrence, often unpleasant or unusual
••••••
|
The police quickly responded to the incident in the park. |
isolated incident |
a single event, not part of a pattern
••••••
|
event, occurrence, happening, episode, affair
••••••
|
routine, normality, usual
••••••
|
serious incident, minor incident, security incident, violent incident
••••••
|
|
#2636
🙂
|
/ɪnˈklaɪnd/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
having a tendency or disposition toward something
••••••
|
He is inclined to help those in need. |
be inclined to |
to have a tendency to do something
••••••
|
prone, disposed, willing, tending
••••••
|
unwilling, disinclined, resistant
••••••
|
inclined to help, inclined to agree, inclined to believe
••••••
|
|
#2637
➕
|
/ɪnˈkluːd/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
included
••••••
|
included
••••••
|
includes
••••••
|
including
••••••
|
to make something part of a whole or group
••••••
|
The package includes free breakfast. |
include in |
to add as a part of something
••••••
|
contain, involve, comprise, encompass, cover
••••••
|
exclude, omit
••••••
|
include details, include items, include features
••••••
|
|
#2638
📋
|
/ɪnˈkluːdɪŋ/
preposition
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
used to show that someone or something is part of a larger group
••••••
|
Many people attended the event, including students and teachers. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
such as, along with, together with, counting
••••••
|
excluding, except
••••••
|
including taxes, including costs, including examples
••••••
|
|
#2639
🌍
|
/ɪnˈkluːʒən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the action or state of including or being included within a group or structure
••••••
|
Diversity and inclusion are key values in modern workplaces. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
integration, acceptance, involvement, participation
••••••
|
exclusion, isolation
••••••
|
social inclusion, cultural inclusion, inclusive society
••••••
|
|
#2640
😵
|
/ˌɪnkoʊˈhɪrəns/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The quality of being unclear, confused, or lacking logical connection.
••••••
|
His speech was full of incoherence and difficult to follow. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
confusion, disorder, disarray, unintelligibility
••••••
|
clarity, coherence
••••••
|
incoherence of speech, incoherence in argument, display incoherence
••••••
|
|
#2641
🤯
|
/ˌɪnkəʊˈhɪərənt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not clear or easy to understand; lacking logical connection.
••••••
|
His explanation was so incoherent that nobody could follow it. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
unclear, confused, unintelligible, garbled, disjointed
••••••
|
clear, coherent, articulate
••••••
|
incoherent speech, incoherent thoughts, incoherent argument
••••••
|
|
#2642
💰
|
/ˈɪnkʌm/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
money received for work or through investments
••••••
|
His monthly income is enough to support his family. |
fixed income |
a regular and steady amount of income
••••••
|
earnings, revenue, salary, wages, profit
••••••
|
expense, loss
••••••
|
income tax, income level, income growth
••••••
|
|
#2643
🌟
|
/ɪnˈkɒmp(ə)rəbl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Without an equal in quality or excellence; matchless.
••••••
|
The view from the mountain was incomparable. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
matchless, unrivaled, peerless, unique
••••••
|
ordinary, average, comparable
••••••
|
incomparable beauty, incomparable skill, incomparable talent
••••••
|
|
#2644
⚠️
|
/ˌɪnkəmˌpætəˈbɪlɪti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state of being unable to exist or work together harmoniously; lack of compatibility
••••••
|
The project failed because of incompatibility between the two software systems. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
conflict, mismatch, inconsistency, discord, incongruity
••••••
|
compatibility, harmony, congruence
••••••
|
personality incompatibility, software incompatibility, fundamental incompatibility, genetic incompatibility
••••••
|
|
#2645
⚡
|
/ˌɪnkəmˈpætəbl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not able to exist or work together without conflict.
••••••
|
Their personalities were completely incompatible. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
conflicting, mismatched, unsuitable, inconsistent
••••••
|
compatible, harmonious, suitable
••••••
|
incompatible personalities, incompatible system, incompatible relationship
••••••
|
|
#2646
🧩
|
/ˌɪnkəmˈpliːt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not finished, lacking some parts or not whole.
••••••
|
Her report was incomplete and needed further details. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
unfinished, partial, imperfect, fragmentary
••••••
|
complete, finished, whole
••••••
|
incomplete work, incomplete report, remain incomplete, incomplete records
••••••
|
|
#2647
🧩
|
/ˌɪnkəmˈpliːtnəs/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the state of not being complete or whole; lack of necessary parts or fullness
••••••
|
The incompleteness of the report caused delays in the project. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
unfinishedness, partiality, deficiency, imperfection, inadequacy
••••••
|
completeness, wholeness, entirety
••••••
|
sense of incompleteness, feeling of incompleteness, structural incompleteness, data incompleteness
••••••
|
|
#2648
🔄
|
/ˌɪnkənˈsɪstənsi/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The quality of being contradictory, irregular, or not staying the same.
••••••
|
There is an inconsistency between his words and actions. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
discrepancy, contradiction, conflict, irregularity
••••••
|
consistency, uniformity, harmony
••••••
|
inconsistency in data, inconsistency between, glaring inconsistency
••••••
|
|
#2649
⚖️
|
/ˌɪnkənˈsɪstənt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Not staying the same throughout; lacking harmony or regularity.
••••••
|
His answers were inconsistent and confusing. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
irregular, contradictory, variable, unpredictable
••••••
|
consistent, stable, reliable
••••••
|
inconsistent behavior, inconsistent results, inconsistent with
••••••
|
|
#2650
🌪️
|
/ɪnˈkɒnstənt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
frequently changing; not consistent or dependable
••••••
|
His inconstant moods made it difficult to work with him. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
unsteady, fickle, variable, unstable, erratic
••••••
|
steady, consistent, reliable
••••••
|
inconstant behavior, inconstant love, inconstant nature
••••••
|
|
#2651
😕
|
/ˌɪnkənˈviːniəns/
noun, verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
inconvenienced
••••••
|
inconvenienced
••••••
|
inconveniences
••••••
|
inconveniencing
••••••
|
trouble or difficulty caused to someone; to cause trouble or difficulty to someone
••••••
|
We apologize for any inconvenience caused by the delay. |
sorry for the inconvenience |
used to politely apologize for trouble caused
••••••
|
trouble, difficulty, hassle, nuisance, burden
••••••
|
convenience, ease, comfort
••••••
|
cause inconvenience, minor inconvenience, major inconvenience, inconvenience caused
••••••
|
|
#2652
🏢
|
/ɪnˈkɔːpəreɪt/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
incorporated
••••••
|
incorporated
••••••
|
incorporates
••••••
|
incorporating
••••••
|
to include something as part of a whole; to form a legal corporation
••••••
|
The teacher incorporated new technology into her lessons. |
incorporate into |
to include something as part of a larger thing
••••••
|
integrate, combine, include, merge, embody
••••••
|
exclude, remove, separate
••••••
|
incorporate into, incorporate ideas, incorporate changes
••••••
|
|
#2653
❌
|
/ɪnkəˈrɛkt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
not correct or accurate
••••••
|
The information you provided was incorrect. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
wrong, erroneous, inaccurate, false
••••••
|
correct, accurate, right
••••••
|
incorrect answer, incorrect information, incorrect decision
••••••
|
|
#2654
📈
|
/ɪnˈkriːs/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
increased
••••••
|
increased
••••••
|
increases
••••••
|
increasing
••••••
|
to make something larger in size, number, or amount
••••••
|
The company plans to increase its workforce next year. |
increase by leaps and bounds |
to grow or improve very quickly
••••••
|
grow, expand, rise, boost, escalate
••••••
|
decrease, reduce, lessen
••••••
|
increase profits, increase demand, increase speed
••••••
|
|
#2655
📈
|
/ɪnˈkriːst/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
increased
••••••
|
increased
••••••
|
increases
••••••
|
increasing
••••••
|
became greater in size, amount, or degree
••••••
|
The company's revenue increased last year. |
increased by leaps and bounds |
to grow or improve very quickly
••••••
|
rose, grew, expanded, escalated, surged
••••••
|
decreased, declined, diminished
••••••
|
increased demand, increased pressure, increased risk, increased use
••••••
|
|
#2656
➕
|
/ɪnˈkriːsɪŋ/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
increased
••••••
|
increased
••••••
|
increases
••••••
|
increasing
••••••
|
continuing to become greater in size, amount, or degree
••••••
|
The number of students is increasing every year. |
increasing returns |
when output grows faster than input
••••••
|
growing, rising, expanding, escalating, mounting
••••••
|
decreasing, declining, reducing
••••••
|
increasing demand, increasing interest, increasing population, increasing rate
••••••
|
|
#2657
📊
|
/ɪnˈkriːsɪŋli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
more and more over time
••••••
|
People are increasingly concerned about climate change. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
progressively, steadily, gradually, more and more
••••••
|
decreasingly, less
••••••
|
increasingly important, increasingly difficult, increasingly popular
••••••
|
|
#2658
🤯
|
/ɪnˈkrɛdəbl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
so extraordinary that it is hard to believe; amazing
••••••
|
The view from the mountain was incredible. |
That's incredible! |
an exclamation used to express amazement
••••••
|
amazing, unbelievable, astonishing, extraordinary, marvelous
••••••
|
ordinary, believable, normal
••••••
|
incredible story, incredible experience, incredible journey, incredible talent
••••••
|
|
#2659
💸
|
/ɪnˈkɜːr/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
incurred
••••••
|
incurred
••••••
|
incurs
••••••
|
incurring
••••••
|
To bring upon oneself something undesirable, usually as a result of actions.
••••••
|
He incurred a fine for parking in the wrong place. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
suffer, sustain, attract, experience, bring on
••••••
|
avoid, escape, evade
••••••
|
incur debt, incur expense, incur loss, incur penalty
••••••
|
|
#2660
🚫
|
/ɪnˈdiːsənt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
not conforming to accepted standards of behavior or morality; improper or offensive
••••••
|
He was warned for making an indecent remark during the meeting. |
indecent exposure |
the act of intentionally showing private parts in public, considered offensive
••••••
|
improper, offensive, obscene, vulgar, unseemly
••••••
|
decent, proper, respectable
••••••
|
indecent behavior, indecent remark, indecent language, indecent act
••••••
|
|
#2661
✅
|
/ɪnˈdiːd/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
used to emphasize or confirm a statement
••••••
|
It was a long journey indeed. |
yes indeed |
used to strongly agree with someone
••••••
|
certainly, truly, really, actually, definitely
••••••
|
doubtfully, uncertainly
••••••
|
indeed true, yes indeed, thank you indeed
••••••
|
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