25.03.2013 Views

frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

elationship should be kept private for the time being. What I<br />

am about to tell you is strictly private. 2 privileged,<br />

restrictive, restricted, exclusive, special, reserved, personal,<br />

inaccessible, non-public; hidden, secluded, concealed, secret,<br />

sneaking: The house is situated on a private road. I had a<br />

private suspicion that they would cancel their trip. 3 personal,<br />

individual, own, intimate, particular: My private affairs are<br />

none of your business. 4 solitary, seclusive, reclusive,<br />

withdrawn, retiring, reticent, ungregarious, non-gregarious,<br />

unsocial, unsociable, antisocial, reserved, uncommunicative,<br />

hermitic(al), hermit-like, eremitic(al); sequestered, secluded,<br />

retired: You have to bear in mind that Edmund is a very private<br />

person.<br />

--n. 5 private soldier, infantryman, foot-soldier, US enlisted<br />

man, Colloq Brit Tommy, Tommy Atkins, squaddie, US GI (Joe),<br />

Slang US grunt: Before cashiering him, they reduced him from<br />

colonel to private. 6 in private. in secret, secretly,<br />

privately, sub rosa, personally, confidentially, behind closed<br />

doors, in camera, off the record, US on the q.t. or Q.T.;<br />

clandestinely, secretively, sneakily, sneakingly,<br />

surreptitiously, furtively, covertly, on the sly: Family<br />

matters should be discussed only in private. They met in private<br />

with agents of the rebel forces. 7 private parts or privates.<br />

genitals, sexual or sex organs, genitalia. The natives wore<br />

loincloths to cover their private parts.<br />

privation n. need, neediness, want, deprivation, hardship, indigence,<br />

necessity, poverty, penury, destitution, strait(s), pauperism,<br />

beggary; distress, misery: The lower classes in Victorian<br />

England suffered terrible privation.<br />

privilege n. benefit, advantage, right, prerogative, concession,<br />

allowance, indulgence, immunity, exemption, dispensation,<br />

freedom, liberty, franchise, permission, consent, leave,<br />

authorization, sanction, authority, licence, carte blanche: The<br />

children were given the privilege of choosing where the family<br />

should go on holiday.<br />

privileged<br />

adj. 1 favoured, advantaged, indulged, entitled, ‚lite,<br />

special, honoured: John was one of the privileged few to be<br />

told her private telephone number. 2 protected, exempt(ed),

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!