raw
Americanadjective
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uncooked, as articles of food.
a raw carrot.
-
not having undergone processes of preparing, dressing, finishing, refining, or manufacture.
raw cotton.
- Synonyms:
- makeshift, rough, unprepared
-
unnaturally or painfully exposed, as flesh, by removal of the skin or natural integument.
-
painfully open, as a sore or wound.
-
crude in quality or character; not tempered or refined by art or taste.
raw humor.
-
ignorant, inexperienced, or untrained.
a raw recruit.
- Synonyms:
- unpracticed, unskilled, green, undisciplined
-
brutally or grossly frank.
a raw portrayal of human passions.
-
brutally harsh or unfair.
a raw deal; receiving raw treatment from his friends.
-
disagreeably damp and chilly, as the weather or air.
a raw, foggy day at the beach.
-
not diluted, as alcoholic spirits.
raw whiskey.
-
unprocessed or unevaluated.
raw data.
noun
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a sore or irritated place, as on the flesh.
-
unrefined sugar, oil, etc.
idioms
adjective
-
(of food) not cooked
raw onion
-
(prenominal) in an unfinished, natural, or unrefined state; not treated by manufacturing or other processes
raw materials for making steel
raw brick
-
(of an edge of material) unhemmed; liable to fray
-
(of the skin, a wound, etc) having the surface exposed or abraded, esp painfully
-
ignorant, inexperienced, or immature
a raw recruit
-
(prenominal) not selected or modified
raw statistics
-
frank or realistic
a raw picture of the breakdown of a marriage
-
(of spirits) undiluted
-
coarse, vulgar, or obscene
-
recently done; fresh
raw paintwork
-
(of the weather) harshly cold and damp
-
informal unfair; unjust (esp in the phrase a raw deal )
noun
-
informal a sensitive point
his criticism touched me on the raw
-
-
informal without clothes; naked
-
in a natural or unmodified state
life in the raw
-
Usage
What does raw mean? Raw describes something that hasn’t been cooked, as in The butcher put a pile of raw meat on the table.Raw can also describe something that hasn’t been processed or refined, as in Raw cotton must be cleaned of plant parts before it can be made into thread or fabric. Raw also refers to skin that was painfully removed, as in The uncomfortable pants rubbed my knees raw. As well, raw can refer to someone who lacks experience or training, as in The rookie detective was too raw to be of any help to the veteran investigator. Raw is rarely used as a noun. It is sometimes used in the idiom in the raw, meaning a natural, unprocessed state or, more informally, referring to something done while naked.Example: The diners became very ill after eating chicken that was more raw that cooked.
Related Words
Raw, crude, rude refer to something not in a finished or highly refined state. Raw applies particularly to material not yet changed by a process, by manufacture, or by preparation for consumption: raw cotton; raw leather. Crude refers to that which still needs refining: crude petroleum. Rude refers to what is still in a condition of rough simplicity or in a makeshift or roughly made form: rude agricultural implements; the rude bridge that arched the flood.
Other Word Forms
- half-raw adjective
- rawish adjective
- rawishness noun
- rawly adverb
- rawness noun
- semiraw adjective
- semirawly adverb
- semirawness noun
Etymology
Origin of raw
First recorded before 1000; Middle English; Old English hrēaw, hrǣw; cognate with Dutch rauw, German roh; akin to Latin crūdus “raw” ( crude ), cruor “blood,” Greek kréas “raw flesh” ( creatine )
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.
GenZ-ers and the younger GenAlpha-ers love his raw, uncensored content - where almost anything can and sometimes does happen live on air.
From BBC
Some bamboo species contain cyanogenic glycosides, which can release cyanide if the shoots are eaten raw or improperly prepared.
From Science Daily
In effect, he argues that the official inflation figures overstate inflation, especially on manufactured and high-tech products, because they don’t adjust the raw prices enough to account for quality improvements.
From MarketWatch
“Ultimately, we shouldn’t reveal every raw thought or feeling,” the author writes.
There is also the question of raw materials.
From BBC
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.