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The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

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transactions, memorandum: Have you the minutes <strong>of</strong> the last<br />

meeting? 3 up to the minute. latest, newest, modern, up to<br />

date, trendy, fashionable, smart, all the rage, in vogue,<br />

stylish, in style, in fashion, … la mode, Colloq in, with it,<br />

hep or hip, hot, cool, US now: She always wears the most<br />

up-to-the-minute clothes.<br />

--v. 4 record, transcribe, take down, write down, note, make<br />

(a) note <strong>of</strong>, document, log: We need someone to minute the<br />

meeting.<br />

minuteý adj. 1 small, little, tiny, tiniest, minuscule, miniature, wee,<br />

infinitesimal, microscopic, micro, diminutive, mini, baby,<br />

pint-sized, bantam, Lilliputian, Colloq teeny, teensy(-weensy),<br />

itty-bitty, itsy-bitsy: <strong>The</strong> minute furniture in the doll's<br />

house was made entirely by hand. 2 unimportant, petty,<br />

insignificant, least, slight, mere, meagre, trifling, trivial,<br />

minor, small, little, Colloq piddling, US picayune: <strong>The</strong><br />

painting was a perfect copy, down to the minutest detail.<br />

miraculous<br />

adj. marvellous, wonderful, wondrous, incredible, unbelievable,<br />

inexplicable, unexplainable, extraordinary, spectacular,<br />

amazing, astounding, astonishing, mind-boggling, remarkable,<br />

phenomenal, fantastic, fabulous; magical, supernatural,<br />

preternatural, superhuman, Colloq out <strong>of</strong> this world, Slang<br />

far-out, crazy: Langley has made a miraculous recovery from<br />

yellow fever.<br />

mire n. 1 swamp, bog, fen, marsh, quagmire, morass, slough, Brit<br />

dialect sump: <strong>The</strong> horse stumbled into the mire and began to<br />

flounder. 2 mud, ooze, muck, slime, dirt: I had to wade<br />

through muck and mire to get to your front door.<br />

--v. 3 enmire, bog down, become entangled or tangled, become<br />

enmeshed or meshed, become involved: Sorry I'm late; I got<br />

mired in a problem at the <strong>of</strong>fice. 4 dirty, soil, begrime,<br />

muddy, befoul, besmirch, sully, tarnish, smear, blacken, defile,<br />

smudge: My boots were badly mired. <strong>The</strong> scandal badly mired his<br />

reputation.<br />

mirror n. 1 looking-glass, glass, speculum, reflector: She stared at<br />

her reflection in the mirror, wondering whether she should grow

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