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1. world
noun.
(ˈwɝːld)
People
in
general;
especially
a
distinctive
group
of
people
with
some
shared
interest.
Synonyms
class
domain
stratum
Grub Street
socio-economic class
academia
academe
social class
Antonyms
impossibility
absence
woman
juvenile
female
Etymology
world (English)
world (Middle English (1100-1500))
woruld (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
Featured Games
2. world
noun.
(ˈwɝːld)
Everything
that
exists
anywhere.
Synonyms
natural order
universe
cosmos
macrocosm
closed universe
creation
nature
heavenly body
celestial body
extragalactic nebula
galaxy
extraterrestrial object
estraterrestrial body
natural object
existence
Antonyms
artifact
timid
rich
brave
living
Etymology
world (English)
world (Middle English (1100-1500))
woruld (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
3. world
noun.
(ˈwɝːld)
The
3rd
planet
from
the
sun;
the
planet
we
live
on.
Synonyms
land
earth
Earth
dry land
solid ground
hydrosphere
hemisphere
air
geosphere
atmosphere
Van Allen belt
lithosphere
sky
globe
solar system
ground
terra firma
Antonyms
human
nonhuman
inhumaneness
uninitiate
poor people
Etymology
world (English)
world (Middle English (1100-1500))
woruld (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
4. world
noun.
(ˈwɝːld)
All
of
your
experiences
that
determine
how
things
appear
to
you.
Synonyms
real world
reality
experience
real life
Antonyms
antitype
nonexistent
existent
nonbeing
nonexistence
Etymology
world (English)
world (Middle English (1100-1500))
woruld (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
5. world
noun.
(ˈwɝːld)
People
in
general
considered
as
a
whole.
Synonyms
admass
people
public
populace
audience
Antonyms
civilian
volunteer
draftee
black
white
Etymology
world (English)
world (Middle English (1100-1500))
woruld (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
6. world
noun.
(ˈwɝːld)
A
part
of
the
earth
that
can
be
considered
separately.
Synonyms
part
piece
Antonyms
dead
initiate
rich people
Etymology
world (English)
world (Middle English (1100-1500))
woruld (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
7. world
noun.
(ˈwɝːld)
The
concerns
of
this
life
as
distinguished
from
heaven
and
the
afterlife.
Synonyms
earth
worldly concern
earthly concern
concern
Antonyms
inactivity
finish
ending
good-natured
ill-natured
Etymology
world (English)
world (Middle English (1100-1500))
woruld (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
8. new
adjective.
(ˈnuː, nˈjuː)
Not
of
long
duration;
having
just
(or
relatively
recently)
come
into
being
or
been
made
or
acquired
or
discovered.
Synonyms
untested
spic-and-span
young
revolutionary
newborn
red-hot
fresh
hot
new-sprung
refreshing
modern
parvenu
newfound
age
novel
rising
bran-new
sunrise
recent
current
spick-and-span
parvenue
virgin
unused
untried
radical
brand-new
Antonyms
nonmodern
old
stale
noncurrent
staleness
Etymology
new (English)
newe (Middle English (1100-1500))
niwe (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
9. new
adjective.
(ˈnuː, nˈjuː)
Original
and
of
a
kind
not
seen
before.
Synonyms
novel
fresh
original
Antonyms
unoriginal
backward
debilitating
tired
Etymology
new (English)
newe (Middle English (1100-1500))
niwe (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
10. new
adjective.
(ˈnuː, nˈjuː)
Lacking
training
or
experience.
Synonyms
inexperient
raw
inexperienced
Antonyms
experienced
unsexy
slow
cold
Etymology
new (English)
newe (Middle English (1100-1500))
niwe (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
Trending Searches 🔥
creative
challenge
negative-impact
depot
dissipate
infancy
white-person
define
dote
serendipity
obliterate
gujarati
roil
reverie
aesthetic
antonym
good
focus
assistance
cohesiveness
center
potential
important
funny
out-of-the-box thinking
assimilate
more-likely
for-the-first-time
basis
mental-health
happy
thesis
know-it-all
afrikaans
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