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- adjectivecomplete (adjective) · completer (comparative adjective) · completest (superlative adjective) · compleat (adjective)
- having all the necessary or appropriate parts:"a complete list of courses offered by the college" · "no wardrobe is complete this year without culottes"
- entire; full:"I only managed one complete term at school"
- having run its full course; finished:"the restoration of the chapel is complete"
- (often used for emphasis) to the greatest extent or degree; total:"a complete ban on smoking" · "their marriage came as a complete surprise to me"
- skilled at every aspect of a particular activity; consummate:"his range of skills made him the complete footballer" · "these articles are for the compleat mathematician"
verbcomplete (verb) · completes (third person present) · completed (past tense) · completed (past participle) · completing (present participle)- finish making or doing:"he completed his Ph.D. in 1983"
- BRITISH ENGLISHconclude the sale of a property:"you may find yourself in a position where you have to wait for your purchaser to complete, whereas your new home is ready"
- american football(of a quarterback) successfully throw (a forward pass) to a receiver:"he completed 12 of 16 passes for 128 yards"
- make (something) whole or perfect:"he only needed one thing to complete his happiness" · "more recent box cameras complete the collection"
- write the required information on (a form or questionnaire):"please complete the attached forms"
Originlate Middle English: from Old French complet or Latin completus, past participle of complere ‘fill up, finish, fulfill’, from com- (expressing intensive force) + plere ‘fill’.Similar and Opposite Wordsadjectiveverb
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