Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for abstract. Search instead for stract.
Synonyms

abstract

American  
[ab-strakt, ab-strakt, ab-strakt, ab-strakt, ab-strakt] / æbˈstrækt, ˈæb strækt, ˈæb strækt, æbˈstrækt, ˈæb strækt /

adjective

  1. thought of apart from concrete realities, specific objects, or actual instances.

    an abstract idea.

  2. expressing a quality or characteristic apart from any specific object or instance, as justice, poverty, and speed.

  3. not applied or practical; theoretical.

    abstract science.

  4. difficult to understand; abstruse.

    abstract speculations.

  5. Fine Arts.

    1. of or relating to the formal aspect of art, emphasizing lines, colors, generalized or geometrical forms, etc., especially with reference to their relationship to one another.

    2. Often Abstract pertaining to the nonrepresentational art styles of the 20th century.


noun

abstracts plural
  1. a summary of a text, scientific article, document, speech, etc.; epitome.

  2. something that concentrates in itself the essential qualities of anything more extensive or more general, or of several things; essence.

  3. an idea or term considered apart from some material basis or object.

  4. an abstract work of art.

verb (used with object)

abstracts, present (3rd person singular) abstracted, past participle, past abstracting present participle
  1. to make an abstract of; summarize.

  2. to draw or take away; remove.

  3. to divert or draw away the attention of.

  4. to steal.

  5. to consider as a general quality or characteristic apart from specific objects or instances.

    to abstract the notions of time, space, and matter.

idioms

  1. abstract away from, to omit from consideration.

  2. in the abstract, without reference to a specific object or instance; in theory.

    beauty in the abstract.

abstract British  

adjective

  1. having no reference to material objects or specific examples; not concrete

  2. not applied or practical; theoretical

  3. hard to understand; recondite; abstruse

  4. denoting art characterized by geometric, formalized, or otherwise nonrepresentational qualities

  5. defined in terms of its formal properties

    an abstract machine

  6. philosophy (of an idea) functioning for some empiricists as the meaning of a general term

    the word ``man'' does not name all men but the abstract idea of manhood

"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

noun

  1. a condensed version of a piece of writing, speech, etc; summary

  2. an abstract term or idea

  3. an abstract painting, sculpture, etc

  4. without reference to specific circumstances or practical experience

"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

verb

  1. to think of (a quality or concept) generally without reference to a specific example; regard theoretically

  2. to form (a general idea) by abstraction

  3. (also intr) to summarize or epitomize

  4. to remove or extract

  5. euphemistic to steal

"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

Other Word Forms

Derived Forms

Inflected Forms

Nouns

Participles

Conjugated Forms

Present

Past

Future

Etymology

Origin of abstract

First recorded in 1400–50; late Middle English: “withdrawn from worldly interests,” from Latin abstractus “drawn off” (past participle of abstrahere ). See abs-, tract 1

Explanation

Use the adjective abstract for something that is not a material object or is general and not based on specific examples. Abstract is from a Latin word meaning "pulled away, detached," and the basic idea is of something detached from physical, or concrete, reality. It is frequently used of ideas, meaning that they don't have a clear applicability to real life, and of art, meaning that it doesn't pictorially represent reality. It is also used as a noun, especially in the phrase "in the abstract" (a joke has a person laying down a new sidewalk saying "I like little boys in the abstract, but not in the concrete"), and as a verb (accented on the second syllable), meaning "to remove."

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing abstract

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.

See Examples For:

In childhood, he paints an abstract picture of God in which the Almighty eerily resembles a movie camera.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 16, 2026

These are not abstract changes on a map: they could affect harvests, water supplies and the livelihoods of hundreds of millions of people.

From BBC Jul. 14, 2026

The work was presented as a scientific meeting abstract, meaning it has not yet undergone peer review or been published as a full journal paper.

From Science Daily Jul. 13, 2026

“Not abstract AI enthusiasm, but capital raising, capacity expansion, data center demand, and hardware bottlenecks.”

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 10, 2026

My major in international relations with a focus on North Africa was no longer an abstract area of study, it was what I was living, eating, and breathing every day for three months.

From "Proud" by Ibtihaj Muhammad

This is a model that abstracts away from anatomical detail to focus on the core computations done by simple brains.

From Science Daily Jun. 5, 2026

Pollock gained international fame for holding his brush above his canvases to create swirling, dripping abstracts, and a 11-foot-wide version, “Number 7A, 1948,” was the largest example of his signature style in private hands.

From The Wall Street Journal May 19, 2026

The court found the “Gonna Love Me” singer had violated the “prohibition against disclosure of ‘summaries, abstracts, portions and descriptions’” of the final judgment in their divorce.

From Los Angeles Times Aug. 15, 2025

A “combo” deal for an additional $600 also offered abstracts slated for another conference, as well as “continued work” on “at least 2 full papers for PubMed indexation” over the following 6 months.

From Science Magazine May 3, 2024

She tapped her foot impatiently, probably wondering why I hadn’t been writing abstracts since nursery school.

From "Liar, Liar" by Gary Paulsen

Apps themselves might be abstracted away as smartphone agents call online services directly on behalf of their users.

From The Wall Street Journal Jun. 5, 2026

One might have expected some gesture toward its origins, rather than its cool and highly abstracted references to Harlem.

From The Wall Street Journal Dec. 17, 2025

Think of it as theater as a healing exercise, or simply an abstracted evening with elaborate, vibrant costumes and choreographed drones creating new constellations in the sky.

From Los Angeles Times Sep. 11, 2025

In England, water is abstracted by water companies for public supply, by industry and for use in electricity generation, such as power station cooling.

From BBC Jul. 15, 2025

Gebu halted, turned with an oddly abstracted air and held out his hand for the coins.

From "The Golden Goblet" by Eloise Jarvis McGraw

“They’re not really abstracting away a stable comprehension of the world,” Marcus said of LLMs.

From MarketWatch Nov. 29, 2025

The bottle is the trap philosophers inadvertently create for themselves by abstracting concepts such as “knowledge,” “being” and “object” from their ordinary usage and analyzing them as though each has some kind of independent essence.

From The Wall Street Journal Nov. 18, 2025

A further four farms were found to be abstracting water without the necessary licence at all.

From BBC Jul. 15, 2025

We should pay less attention to the precedents and more to the impacts, and we need to stop abstracting the actual gains and losses that come out of these decisions.

From Slate Jun. 9, 2025

Leisured, and skilled at abstracting from immediate experience, the scholar is able to see how aspects of individual experience constitute a culture.

From "Hunger of Memory" by Richard Rodriguez

Vocabulary.com logo
by dictionary.com

Dictionary.com's Learning Companion

Go beyond just looking up words.
Remember them forever with VocabTrainer.

Start training