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- adjectivepresent (adjective)noun(the present)present (noun) · the present (noun)
- the period of time now occurring:"they are happy and at peace, refusing to think beyond the present"Similar:the present timethe here and nowthis day and agethe present momentthe time being
- grammara present tense. See also historic present."the verbs are all in the present"
OriginMiddle English: via Old French from Latin praesent- ‘being at hand’, present participle of praeesse, from prae ‘before’ + esse ‘be’.verbpresent (verb) · presents (third person present) · presented (past tense) · presented (past participle) · presenting (present participle)- give or award formally or ceremonially:"a celebrity will present the prizes" · "a top executive will present an award to employees who built the F-150"
- (present someone with)give someone (a gift or award) in a formal or ceremonial way:"my students presented me with some flowers"
- show or offer (something) for others to scrutinize or consider:"he stopped and presented his passport"
- formally deliver (a check or bill) for acceptance or payment:"a check presented by Mr. Jackson was returned by the bank"
- lawbring (a complaint, petition, or evidence) formally to the notice of a court:"the psychological evidence was presented in court"
- exhibit (a particular state or appearance) to others:"the EU presented a united front over the crisis"
- be the cause of (a problem or difficulty):"this should not present much difficulty"
- represent (someone or something) to others in a particular way:"he presented himself as a hardworking man"
- exhibit the outward or physical appearance of a specified gender:"at that time she was presenting as male and was hired with a traditionally male first name"
- medicine(present with)(of a patient) come forward for or undergo initial medical examination for a particular condition or symptom:"the patient presented with mild clinical encephalopathy"
- (of an illness) manifest itself.
- medicine(of a part of a fetus) be directed toward the cervix during labor.
- hold out or aim (a firearm) at something so as to be ready to fire:"they were to present their rifles, take aim, and fire"
OriginMiddle English: from Old French presenter, from Latin praesentare ‘place before’ (in medieval Latin ‘present as a gift’), from praesent- ‘being at hand’ (see present).nounpresent (noun) · presents (plural noun)OriginMiddle English: from Old French, originally in the phrase mettre une chose en present à quelqu'un ‘put a thing into the presence of a person’. Present Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
PRESENT | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
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Present - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms - Vocabulary.com
PRESENT definition and meaning | Collins English …
You use present to describe things and people that exist now, rather than those that existed in the past or those that may exist in the future.
PRESENT Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
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PRESENT - Meaning & Translations | Collins English Dictionary
Present Definition & Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
Present - definition of present by The Free Dictionary
PRESENT | meaning - Cambridge Learner's Dictionary
present - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Present Definition & Meaning - YourDictionary
Learn the various meanings and uses of the word present as a noun, adjective, verb, and idiom. Find synonyms, antonyms, examples, and related words for present.
present | meaning of present in Longman Dictionary of …
PRESENT | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
PRESENT definition in American English - Collins Online Dictionary
present - WordReference.com Dictionary of English
PRESENT - Definition & Translations | Collins English Dictionary
present - definition and meaning - Wordnik
Meaning of present in Essential English Dictionary - Cambridge …
What does Present mean? - Definitions.net
Present Perfect Tense: Definition, Structure, and Uses
PRESENT | English meaning - Cambridge Essential American
PRESENT definition | Cambridge Essential American Dictionary
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