a term that is difficult to define The government study seeks to define urban poverty. Her book aims to define acceptable social behavior. She believes that success should be defined in terms of health and happiness. That fence defines the far edge of the property.
Recent Examples on the WebThe game was restarted — twice — during what even the players struggle to define as errors by the officials or an outright attempt to cheat them. Brian Mahoney, Baltimore Sun, 9 Sep. 2022 Among the dozens of photographs from the Fairchild archives on display are pictures spotlighting several musical luminaries who helped shape and define New York fashion over the decades. Joe Lynch, Billboard, 9 Sep. 2022 Bolivia and Ecuador also define themselves as plurinational.BostonGlobe.com, 2 Sep. 2022 Some define it as an intangible asset described as the soul of the company. Danielle Abril, Anchorage Daily News, 1 Sep. 2022 For the sake of their study, the CDC researchers define long Covid as involving symptoms four or more weeks after a Covid-19 diagnosis. Jen Christensen, CNN, 5 Aug. 2022 Some define it as two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, no matter what other indicators—like a strong labor market—say about the economy. Christine Mui, Fortune, 29 July 2022 Medical experts define miscarriage as a pregnancy that ends naturally before 20 weeks’ gestation.New York Times, 17 July 2022 Marcel’s smallness and cuteness don’t define him, in other words. Shirley Li, The Atlantic, 30 June 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English diffinen, defynen, borrowed from Anglo-French definer, diffiner, borrowed (with conjugation change) from Medieval Latin dēfīnīre, diffīnīre (dif- by association with dif-, assimilated form of dis-dis-), going back to Latin dēfīnīre "to mark the limits of, determine, give an exact description of," from dē-de- + fīnīre "to mark out the boundaries of, limit" — more at finish entry 1