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- Dictionarydeep/diːp/
adjective
- 1. extending far down from the top or surface: "a deep gorge" Similar Opposite
- 2. very intense or extreme: "she was in deep trouble" Similar
noun
- 1. the sea: literary "denizens of the deep" Similar
- 2. the part of the field distant from the batter.
adverb
- 1. far down or in; deeply: "he travelled deep into the forest" Similar
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1. : extending far from some surface or area: such as. a. : extending far downward. a deep well. a deep chasm. b (1) : extending well inward from an outer surface. a deep gash. a deep -chested animal. (2) : not located superficially within the body. deep pressure receptors in muscles. c. : extending well back from a surface accepted as front.
DEEP definition: 1. going or being a long way down from the top or surface, or being of a particular distance from…. Learn more.
If something is deep, it extends a long way down from the ground or from the top surface of something. The water is very deep and mysterious-looking. Den had dug a deep hole in the centre of the garden.
1. extending or situated relatively far down from a surface: a deep pool. 2. extending or situated relatively far inwards, backwards, or sideways: a deep border of trees. 3. (Cricket) cricket relatively far from the pitch: the deep field; deep third man. 4.
adjective. 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”.
Definition of deep adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
If something is deep, it extends a long way down from the ground or from the top surface of something. The water is very deep and mysterious looking. Den had dug a deep hole in the center of the garden.