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- adjectivenew (adjective) · newer (comparative adjective) · newest (superlative adjective) · New (adjective)
- not existing before; made, introduced, or discovered recently or now for the first time:"new crop varieties" · "this tendency is not new" · "a fascinating mix of the old and the new"
- not previously used or owned:"a secondhand bus cost a fraction of a new one"
- of recent origin or arrival:"a new baby"
- (of vegetables) dug or harvested early in the season:"new potatoes"
- already existing but seen, experienced, or acquired recently or now for the first time:"her new bike"
- (new to)unfamiliar or strange to (someone):"a way of living that was new to me"
- (new to/at)(of a person) inexperienced at or unaccustomed to doing (something):"I'm quite new to gardening"
- different from a recent previous one:"I have a new assistant" · "this would be her new home"
- in addition to another or others already existing:"recruiting new pilots overseas"
- (in place names) discovered or founded later than and named after:"New York"
- just beginning or beginning anew and regarded as better than what went before:"starting a new life" · "the new South Africa"
- (of a person) reinvigorated or restored:"a bottle of pills would make him a new man"
- superseding another or others of the same kind, and advanced in method or theory:"the new architecture"
- reviving another or others of the same kind:"the New Bohemians"
adverbnew (adverb)- newly; recently:"new-mown hay" · "new-fallen snow"
OriginOld English nīwe, nēowe, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch nieuw and German neu, from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit nava, Latin novus, and Greek neos ‘new’.Similar and Opposite Wordsadjective
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Powered by Microsoft StartWEB5 days ago · Learn the various meanings and uses of the word new as an adjective, noun, or combining form. Find synonyms, examples, and related words for new in British and American English.
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NEW - 96 Synonyms and Antonyms - Cambridge English
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