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- DEEP Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of DEEP is extending far from some surface or area How to use deep in a sentence Synonym Discussion of Deep
- DEEP Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
extending far in width; broad a deep border ranging far from the earth and sun a deep space probe having a specified dimension in depth a tank 8 feet deep covered or immersed to a specified depth (often used in combination) standing knee-deep in water
- DEEP - Definition Meaning - Reverso English Dictionary
1 adj If something is deep, it extends a long way down from the ground or from the top surface of something , (Antonym: shallow) The water is very deep and mysterious-looking , Den had dug a deep hole in the centre of the garden , Kelly swore quietly, looking at the deep cut on his left hand , a deep ravine
- Deep - definition of deep by The Free Dictionary
deep - 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 | definition in the Cambridge Learner’s Dictionary
DEEP meaning: 1 having a long distance from the top to the bottom: 2 having a long distance from the front to… Learn more
- DEEP - Definition Translations | Collins English Dictionary
If something is deep, it extends a long way down from the ground or from the top surface of something [ ] 2 A deep container, such as a closet, extends or measures a long distance from front to back [ ] 3 You use deep to emphasize the seriousness, strength, importance, or degree of something [emphasis] [ ]
- deep adjective - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
having a large distance from the front edge to the furthest point inside used to describe or ask about the depth of something The water is only a few centimetres deep How deep is the wound? (in adjectives) as far up or down as the point mentioned The water was only waist-deep so I walked ashore She stood knee-deep in the water
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