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Word Meanings - ABSTRACTED - Book Publishers vocabulary database

1. Separated or disconnected; withdrawn; removed; apart. The evil abstracted stood from his own evil. Milton. 2. Separated from matter; abstract; ideal. 3. Abstract; abstruse; difficult. Johnson. 4. Inattentive to surrounding objects; absent

Additional info about word: ABSTRACTED

1. Separated or disconnected; withdrawn; removed; apart. The evil abstracted stood from his own evil. Milton. 2. Separated from matter; abstract; ideal. 3. Abstract; abstruse; difficult. Johnson. 4. Inattentive to surrounding objects; absent in mind. "An abstracted scholar." Johnson.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of ABSTRACTED)

Related words: (words related to ABSTRACTED)

  • VISIONARY
    1. Of or pertaining to a visions or visions; characterized by, appropriate to, or favorable for, visions. The visionary hour When musing midnight reigns. Thomson. 2. Affected by phantoms; disposed to receive impressions on the imagination; given
  • ABSTRACTION
    The act process of leaving out of consideration one or more properties of a complex object so as to attend to others; analysis. Thus, when the mind considers the form of a tree by itself, or the color of the leaves as separate from their size or
  • ABSENTATION
    The act of absenting one's self. Sir W. Hamilton.
  • ABSTRACTEDLY
    In an abstracted manner; separately; with absence of mind.
  • ABSENTEEISM
    The state or practice of an absentee; esp. the practice of absenting one's self from the country or district where one's estate is situated.
  • ABSENTEE
    One who absents himself from his country, office, post, or duty; especially, a landholder who lives in another country or district than that where his estate is situated; as, an Irish absentee. Macaulay.
  • ABSENTANEOUS
    Pertaining to absence.
  • ABSTRACTITIOUS
    Obtained from plants by distillation. Crabb.
  • ABSTRACTNESS
    The quality of being abstract. "The abstractness of the ideas." Locke.
  • SPECULATIVE
    1. Given to speculation; contemplative. The mind of man being by nature speculative. Hooker. 2. Involving, or formed by, speculation; ideal; theoretical; not established by demonstration. Cudworth. 3. Of or pertaining to vision; also,
  • ABSTRACTIONAL
    Pertaining to abstraction.
  • FANCIFUL
    1. Full of fancy; guided by fancy, rather than by reason and experience; whimsical; as, a fanciful man forms visionary projects. 2. Conceived in the fancy; not consistent with facts or reason; abounding in ideal qualities or figures; as, a fanciful
  • ABSTRACTIONIST
    An idealist. Emerson.
  • ABSENT-MINDED
    Absent in mind; abstracted; preoccupied. -- Ab`sent-mind"ed*ness, n. -- Ab`sent-mind"ed*ly, adv.
  • ABSENTER
    One who absents one's self.
  • ABSENTNESS
    The quality of being absent-minded. H. Miller.
  • ABSTRACTIVE
    Having the power of abstracting; of an abstracting nature. "The abstractive faculty." I. Taylor.
  • ABSENTMENT
    The state of being absent; withdrawal. Barrow.
  • ABSTRACTIVENESS
    The quality of being abstractive; abstractive property.
  • DREAMY
    Abounding in dreams or given to dreaming; appropriate to, or like, dreams; visionary. "The dreamy dells." Tennyson.
  • DIVISIONARY
    Divisional.
  • PROVISIONARY
    Provisional. Burke.
  • REVISIONAL; REVISIONARY
    Of or pertaining to revision; revisory.

 

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