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quick
[ kwik ]
adjective
- done, proceeding, or occurring with promptness or rapidity, as an action, process, etc.; prompt; immediate:
a quick response.
Synonyms: ,
Antonyms:
- that is over or completed within a short interval of time:
a quick shower.
- moving, or able to move, with speed:
a quick fox; a quick train.
- swift or rapid, as motion:
a quick flick of the wrist.
- easily provoked or excited; hasty:
a quick temper.
Synonyms: , , ,
- keenly responsive; lively; acute:
a quick wit.
- acting with swiftness or rapidity:
a quick worker.
Synonyms: , ,
- prompt or swift to do something:
quick to respond.
- prompt to perceive; sensitive:
a quick eye.
- prompt to understand, learn, etc.; of ready intelligence:
a quick student.
Antonyms:
- (of a bend or curve) sharp:
a quick bend in the road.
- consisting of living plants:
a quick pot of flowers.
- brisk, as fire, flames, heat, etc.
- Archaic.
- endowed with life.
- having a high degree of vigor, energy, or activity.
noun
- living persons:
the quick and the dead.
- the tender, sensitive flesh of the living body, especially that under the nails:
nails bitten down to the quick.
- the vital or most important part.
- Chiefly British.
- a line of shrubs or plants, especially of hawthorn, forming a hedge.
- a single shrub or plant in such a hedge.
adverb
quick
/ ɪ /
adjective
- (of an action, movement, etc) performed or occurring during a comparatively short time
a quick move
- lasting a comparatively short time; brief
a quick flight
- accomplishing something in a time that is shorter than normal
a quick worker
- characterized by rapidity of movement; swift or fast
a quick walker
- immediate or prompt
a quick reply
- postpositive eager or ready to perform (an action)
quick to criticize
- responsive to stimulation; perceptive or alert; lively
a quick eye
- eager or enthusiastic for learning
a quick intelligence
- easily excited or aroused
a quick temper
- skilfully swift or nimble in one's movements or actions; deft
quick fingers
- archaic.
- alive; living
- as noun living people (esp in the phrase the quick and the dead )
- archaic.lively or eager
a quick dog
- (of a fire) burning briskly
- composed of living plants
a quick hedge
- dialect.(of sand) lacking firmness through being wet
- quick with child archaic.pregnant, esp being in an advanced state of pregnancy, when the movements of the fetus can be felt
noun
- any area of living flesh that is highly sensitive to pain or touch, esp that under a toenail or fingernail or around a healing wound
- the vital or most important part (of a thing)
- short for quickset
- cut someone to the quickto hurt someone's feelings deeply; offend gravely
adverb
- in a rapid or speedy manner; swiftly
- soon
I hope he comes quick
interjection
- a command requiring the hearer to perform an action immediately or in as short a time as possible
Confusables Note
Derived Forms
- ˈܾ, adverb
- ˈܾԱ, noun
Other Word Forms
- ܾn noun
- ܲ·ܾ adjective
- ܲ·ܾly adverb
- un·ܾn noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of quick1
Idioms and Phrases
- cut to the quick, to injure deeply; hurt the feelings of:
Their callous treatment cut her to the quick.
More idioms and phrases containing quick
- cut to the quick
- (quick) on the uptake
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
It is hoped the technique will make surveying butterflies and moths quicker and reveal secrets about their behaviour and evolution.
"It was a very quick birth actually, Very easy," she said.
She learned to cultivate her press relationships, always ready with a quick, clever reply that would make great copy.
When they recovered in early April, he was quick with an upbeat post on X: “Never bet against Donald Trump. Never bet against America.”
Official figures show internet sales as a percentage of total retail has risen steadily over the past 20 years and now stands at about 27%, with consumers expecting ever quicker deliveries or returns.
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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.
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