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Synonyms

pure

American  
[pyoor] / pyʊər /

adjective

purer, purest
  1. free from anything of a different, inferior, or contaminating kind; free from extraneous matter.

    pure gold;

    pure water.

    Synonyms:
    immaculate, unstained, unalloyed, unadulterated, unmixed
  2. unmodified by an admixture; simple or homogeneous.

  3. of unmixed descent or ancestry.

    a pure breed of dog.

  4. free from foreign or inappropriate elements.

    pure Attic Greek.

  5. clear; free from blemishes.

    pure skin.

  6. (of literary style) straightforward; unaffected.

  7. abstract or theoretical (applied ).

    pure science.

  8. without any discordant quality; clear and true.

    pure tones in music.

  9. absolute; utter; sheer.

    to sing for pure joy.

  10. being that and nothing else; mere.

    a pure accident.

  11. clean, spotless, or unsullied.

    pure hands.

  12. untainted with evil; innocent.

    pure in heart.

    Synonyms:
    virtuous, modest
  13. physically chaste; virgin.

  14. ceremonially or ritually clean.

  15. free of or without guilt; guiltless.

  16. independent of sense or experience.

    pure knowledge.

  17. Biology, Genetics.

    1. homozygous.

    2. containing only one characteristic for a trait.

  18. Phonetics. monophthongal.


pure British  
/ pjʊə /

adjective

  1. not mixed with any extraneous or dissimilar materials, elements, etc

    pure nitrogen

  2. free from tainting or polluting matter; clean; wholesome

    pure water

  3. free from moral taint or defilement

    pure love

  4. (prenominal) (intensifier)

    pure stupidity

    a pure coincidence

  5. (of a subject, etc) studied in its theoretical aspects rather than for its practical applications Compare applied

    pure mathematics

    pure science

  6. (of a vowel) pronounced with more or less unvarying quality without any glide; monophthongal

  7. (of a consonant) not accompanied by another consonant

  8. of supposedly unmixed racial descent

  9. genetics biology breeding true for one or more characteristics; homozygous

  10. music

    1. (of a sound) composed of a single frequency without overtones

    2. (of intervals in the system of just intonation) mathematically accurate in respect to the ratio of one frequency to another

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Related Words

See clean.

Other Word Forms

  • hyperpure adjective
  • hyperpurely adverb
  • hyperpureness noun
  • pureness noun
  • superpure adjective
  • unpure adjective
  • unpurely adverb
  • unpureness noun

Etymology

Origin of pure

First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English pur, from Old French, from Latin pūrus “clean, unmixed, plain, pure”

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

"Breathing in the night sky is something totally different: Cool, cold, fresh and pure - like drinking water from a well."

From BBC

“This is pure geopolitical nitro, leaving bulls high-fiving over the chokepoint drama,” he noted.

From MarketWatch

“This is pure geopolitical nitro, leaving bulls high-fiving over the chokepoint drama,” he noted.

From MarketWatch

And two Americans: Kenyon, a wry, observant, skeptical humanist sculptor, perhaps a stand-in for Hawthorne himself; and Hilda, a New England Puritan painter—self-possessed, pious, unswervingly loyal, pure as a flight of doves.

From The Wall Street Journal

Expanding too far, too quickly could be a problem for the pure plays.

From Barron's