Definition von (e) deep im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
- Deep North
- Queensland, and sometimes also including Northern Territory
- Deep South
- a descriptive category of cultural and geographic subregions in the American South
- Deep Throat
- A secret informant possessing valuable information, especially one who stays secret long after the incident in question is concluded
- Deep Throats
- plural form of Deep Throat
- beauty is only skin deep
- What matters is a person's character, rather than his/her appearance
- caught between the devil and the deep blue sea
- Having a choice between two alternatives, both undesirable
- deep
- Having its bottom far down
- deep
- Low in pitch
She has a very deep contralto.
- deep
- Profound, having great meaning or import, but possibly obscure or not obvious
That is a deep thought!.
- deep
- Immersed, submerged (in)
deep in debt, deep in the mud.
- deep
- Sound, heavy (describing a state of sleep from which one is not easily awoken)
He was in a deep sleep.
- deep
- deeply
Hepaticology, outside the temperate parts of the Northern Hemisphere, still lies deep in the shadow cast by that ultimate closet taxonomist, Franz Stephani—a ghost whose shadow falls over us all.
He's deeply attached to her.
- He is deeply attached to her.
He is deeply attached to her.
- He's deeply attached to her.
- deep
- part of a lake, sea, etc
creatures of the deep.
- deep
- Voluminous
to take a deep breath / sigh / drink.
- deep
- A fielding position near the boundary
Russell is a safe pair of hands in the deep.
- deep
- Dark and highly saturated
That's a very deep shade of blue.
- deep
- : the sea, the ocean
- deep
- The deep (meaning 2 above) part of a problem
- deep
- In extent in a direction away from the observer
The shelves are 30cm deep.
- deep
- To a significant, not superficial, extent
They're deep in discussion.
- deep
- A long way inside; situated far in or back
American football Relatively farther downfield.
- deep
- In a number of rows or layers:
a crowd three deep along the funeral procession.
- deep
- Thick
There was a deep layer of soot over the window.
- deep blue
- intense blue
- deep blue sea
- Sea, ocean, open sea
- deep blue sea
- The sea, the ocean, the open sea
- deep breathing
- Alternative name of diaphragmatic breathing
Diaphragmatic breathing is controlled deep breathing using the lower abdomen rather than expanding the upper chest area.
- deep breathing
- Alternative form of deep-breathing. Attributive form of deep breathing
An easy, basic deep breathing exercise consists of taking a deep breath, then slowly blowing out until there is no air left.
- deep copies
- plural form of deep copy
- deep copy
- To make a deep copy of
I'd prefer to deep copy that in order to avoid complications with updates.
- deep copy
- To make a deep copy
This is a situation where you either have to deep copy or handle the complication of updates.
- deep copy
- A copy of a data structure duplicating not only the structure itself, but all structures to which it is linked
Don't try to make a deep copy of that -- you'll pull in half the database.
- deep cover
- a fielding position on the off side, about 30° forward of square and near the boundary; a fielder in that position
- deep down
- Fundamentally; in essence; in reality; really
He seems like an average businessman, but deep down he's an overgrown kid with a necktie.
- deep embedding
- The act of representing one logic or language with another by providing a semantic function that assigns a meaning to each term
- deep embedding
- A specific such semantic function
- deep end
- The part of a swimming pool with relatively deep water
- deep end
- A situation where expertise or experience is required
- deep fryer
- A heated vessel for frying food by immersing in hot oil, as opposed to shallow frying in a frying pan
- deep geological repository
- A concept that involves the placement of long-lived radioactive waste, often spent nuclear fuel, in rooms excavated deep within stable, low-permeability bedrock
- deep inelastic collision
- A high-energy nuclear reaction in which two nuclei overlap and exchange energy and nucleons
- deep inside
- at heart, deep down, really
The leftist is antagonistic to the concept of competition because, deep inside, he feels like a loser.
- deep linking
- The practice of linking to a specific page or file within a website so as to bypass introductory pages, considered a violation of netiquette
- deep midwicket
- A fielding position on the leg side, about 30° forward of square and near the boundary; a fielder in that position
- deep pile carpet
- A carpet having relatively long fibres; typically used in bedrooms or rooms that get light wear
- deep pockets
- An ample supply of money, especially money which one is willing to spend; the possessor of such money
The federal government was the one party with the deep pockets to meet the rent-seeking needs of insurers and high-risk property owners.
- deep point
- A fielding position on the off side, square of the batsman's wicket and near the boundary; a fielder in that position
- deep sea
- The deeper part of the sea or ocean in which no light penetrates
- deep six
- To discard, cancel, halt; to completely put an end to something
They had put many hundreds of hours into the project before it was deep-sixed by management.
- deep sky object
- An object in the night sky other than a solar system object, single star or multiple star system
- deep sky objects
- plural form of deep sky object
- deep sleep
- : Artificially induced hibernation in humans for the purpose of long distance travel
- deep sleep
- State of sleep from which it is difficult to wake
- deep space
- All of space beyond the gravitational influence of Earth, or outside the Solar System
- deep square leg
- A fielding position on the leg side, square of the batsman's wicket; a fielder in that position
- deep stack
- A player who has a large amount of money relative to the stakes being played
- deep stack
- An amount of money that is large relative to the stakes being played
- deep stacked
- Having a deep stack
- deep stacks
- plural form of deep stack
- deep state
- An alleged group of influential antidemocratic coalitions within the Turkish political system and military
- deep thinker
- A person whose thoughts are profound; an intellectual
THOMAS PAINE. Oh what fun it is to be a rebel, says Mr. Bradford. Paine was a commonplace rebel, entirely practical. Not educated, not a deep thinker.
- deep vein thrombosis
- A potentially fatal condition in which one or more thrombi (or clot) form in the predominantly the leg or, more unusually, the arm. The clot may break free from the venous wall and travel via the circulatory system to the heart or to the lungs (causing a pulmonary embolism); this condition is often caused by keeping the legs bent for long periods but can also be caused by other medical problems
- deep water
- Waters suitable for deep-draft ships, especially ocean-going
- deep water
- A difficult or embarrassing situation
You will be in deep water if you are found copying from other dictionaries.
- deep waters
- plural form of deep water
- deep-breathing
- Attributive form of deep breathing
Instructions for the two-part deep-breathing exercise can be found in chapter 4.
- deep-breathing
- Alternative form of deep breathing. Alternative name of diaphragmatic breathing
- deep-copy
- Alternative spelling of deep copy
- deep-fat fryer
- A heated vessel for frying food by immersing in hot fat or oil, as opposed to shallow frying in a frying pan
- deep-freeze
- To freeze at very low temperatures
- deep-fried
- Of food, cooked in a deep fryer
- deep-fried
- Simple past tense and past participle of deep-fry
- deep-frozen
- Past participle of deep-freeze
- deep-fry
- A heated cooking pan or appliance used to deep-fry foods
- deep-fry
- To cook (food) by deep-frying
- deep-frying
- Present participle of deep-fry
- deep-frying
- A method of cooking by immersion in hot oil
- deep-rooted
- having deep roots
- deep-rooted
- well established; long standing; deep-seated
- deep-sea
- of, related to or located in the deeper part of the sea
- deep-sea prawn
- a species of shrimp found in cold parts of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, Pandalus borealis
- deep-sea prawns
- plural form of deep-sea prawn
- deep-seated
- That which is implanted or firmly established
- deep-six
- to throw something overboard from a ship
- deep-six
- to get rid of something unwanted
First, the stark message to “eat less” of a particular food has been deep-sixed. - 28/01/2007, New York Times.
- deep-sleep
- Attributive form of deep sleep, noun
His deep-sleep moaning rather disturbed me.
- deep-vein thrombosis
- Alternative spelling of deep vein thrombosis
- deep-water
- Having a great depth of water
a deep-water harbour.
- deep-water
- Carried out at great depth
deep-water drilling.
- dig deep
- To make a lot of effort with all one's resources
If you want to join the marines, there's no room for laziness. You really have to dig deep.
- in at the deep end
-
Also 'jump in at the deep end' - to deliberately tackle a difficult area; to take the bull by the horns.
- in too deep
- In a situation where one can't cope
Because I'm in too deep, and I'm trying to keep up above in my head instead of going under. ().
- knee-deep
- Reaching up to the knees
- knee-deep
- Deeply involved in something, or preoccupied with something
- knee-deep
- Submerged to the knees
- knee-deep in the Big Muddy
- Stuck in a predicament; mired in a difficult situation, especially one resulting from poor judgment or bad leadership
In the classic ‘knee deep in the Big Muddy’ scenario (Staw, 1976), individuals continue to contribute to a losing cause long after it is clear that this is a tremendous waste of money.
- off the deep end
- Crazy, erratic, or irrational
It used to be a funny comic, but lately it has gone off the deep end.
- skin-deep
- shallow, superficial
Chris Huhne, environment spokesman for the Liberal Democrats, said Mr Blair's remarks showed he was delusional on climate change and that his environmentalism was only skin deep. - The Independent, 10/01/07.
- still water runs deep
- Alternative form of still waters run deep
- still waters run deep
- A person with a calm appearance has, or may have, considerable inner emotion, character, or intellect
Isabel Pierce, the central character of Sweetwater, Roxana Robinson's fluid third novel, gives the appearance of being a thoughtful, reserved, quiet woman who won't rock any boats in her life. Yet she harbors passions; it might be said of her that still waters run deep.
- throw in at the deep end
- to introduce a person to a new situation without adequately preparing him or her
- waist deep in the Big Muddy
- Alternative form of knee-deep in the Big Muddy
- waist-deep
- As deep as would reach to the waist (of a standing person)
- deep focus
- A camera technique that affords great depth of field, keeping both close and distant planes in focus at the same time
- Deep Web
- The Deep Web (also called the Deepnet, the Invisible Web, the Darknet, the Undernet or the hidden Web) is World Wide Web content that is not part of the Surface Web, which is indexed by standard search engines
- cut someone deep
- (Ev ile ilgili) Scar someone in an emotional way
- deep
- {a} far to the bottom, knowing, affecting, dark
- deep
- {n} the sea, a solemn or still part, depth
- deep
- {a} in a high degree, sorrowfully
- deep cycle
- (Elektrik, Elektronik) (adjective) denoting a type of electric battery that can be totally discharged and recharged several times
- deep discount bond
- (Finans) A zero-coupon bond (also called a discount bond or deep discount bond) is a bond bought at a price lower than its face value, with the face value repaid at the time of maturity. It does not make periodic interest payments, or have so-called "coupons," hence the term zero-coupon bond. Investors earn return from the compounded interest all paid at maturity plus the difference between the discounted price of the bond and its par (or redemption) value. Examples of zero-coupon bonds include U.S. Treasury bills, U.S. savings bonds, long-term zero-coupon bonds, and any type of coupon bond that has been stripped of its coupons
- deep pocket
- (deyim) Deep pocket is an American slang term; it usually means "extensive financial wealth or resources". It is usually used in reference to big companies or organizations (ex: the American tobacco companies have "deep pockets"), although it can be used in reference to individuals (e.g., Bill Gates, Donald Trump)
- deep six
- (deyim) Get rid of; destroy utterly. Origin: (as the deep six 'the grave'): perh. from the custom of burial at sea at a depth of six fathoms
- deep six
- (deyim) A place of disposal or abandonment ― used especially in the phrase give it the deep six
- deep-rooted
- (of ideas, beliefs, prejudices, etc.) firmly fixed, implanted, or held; ingrained
- give it a deep six
- (deyim) Toss out; get rid of
- go off the deep end
- To behave hysterically or very recklessly