English > new: 11 senses > adjective 1Meaning | not of long duration; having just (or relatively recently) come into being or been made or acquired or discovered. |
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Examples | - "a new law"
- "new cars"
- "a new comet"
- "a new friend"
- "a new year"
- "the New World"
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Attribute of | age | How long something has existed |
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Narrower | brand-new, bran-new, spic-and-span, spick-and-span | conspicuously new |
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fresh | (of a cycle) beginning or occurring again |
hot, red-hot | Newest or most recent |
newborn, new-sprung | Having just or recently arisen or come into existence |
newfangled, new-fangled | (of a new kind or fashion) gratuitously new |
newfound | newly discovered |
novel, refreshing | pleasantly new or different |
parvenu, parvenue | Of or characteristic of a parvenu |
recent | New |
revolutionary, radical | markedly new or introducing radical change |
rising | newly come into prominence |
sunrise | Of an industry or technology |
untested, untried | not yet proved or subjected to testing |
unused | not yet put into use |
virgin | Used or worked for the first time |
young | In its early stage / stage |
See also | current | occurring in or belonging to the present time |
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fresh | recently made, produced, or harvested |
modern | belonging to the modern era |
young, immature | (used of living things especially persons) in an early period of life or development or growth |
Opposite | old | Of long duration |
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Spanish | nuevo |
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Catalan | nou |
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Nouns | newness | the quality of being new |
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