deep
— Adjective
– English
~ extending relatively far inward; "a deep border"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ having or denoting a low vocal or instrumental range; "a deep voice"; "a bass voice is lower than a baritone voice"; "a bass clarinet"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ relatively thick from top to bottom; "deep carpets"; "deep snow"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ 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"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ marked by depth of thinking; "deep thoughts"; "a deep allegory"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ intense or extreme; "in deep trouble"; "deep happiness"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ very distant in time or space; "deep in the past"; "deep in enemy territory"; "deep in the woods"; "a deep space probe"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ with head or back bent low; "a deep bow"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ 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"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ (of darkness) densely dark; "thick night"; "thick darkness"; "a face in deep shadow"; "deep night"
deep
— Adjective
– English
~ relatively deep or strong; affecting one deeply; "a deep breath"; "a deep sigh"; "deep concentration"; "deep emotion"; "a deep trance"; "in a deep sleep"
deepening
— Adjective
– English
~ accumulating and becoming more intense; "the deepening gloom"; "felt a deepening love"; "the thickening dusk"
defamatory
— Adjective
– English
~ (used of statements) harmful and often untrue; tending to discredit or malign
defeasible
— Adjective
– English
~ capable of being annulled or voided or terminated; "a claim to an estate may be defeasible so long as the claimant is under 21 and unmarried"
defeated
— Adjective
– English
~ beaten or overcome; not victorious; "the defeated enemy"
defeated
— Adjective
– English
~ disappointingly unsuccessful; "disappointed expectations and thwarted ambitions"; "their foiled attempt to capture Calais"; "many frustrated poets end as pipe-smoking teachers"; "his best efforts were thwarted"
defective
— Adjective
– English
~ not working properly; "a bad telephone connection"; "a defective appliance"
defective
— Adjective
– English
~ having a defect; "I returned the appliance because it was defective"
defective
— Adjective
– English
~ markedly subnormal in structure or function or intelligence or behavior; "defective speech"
defekt
— Adjective
– Danish
~ som ikke fungerer normalt (pga. en pludselig opstå ...