Advertisement
Advertisement
quick
[kwik]
adjective
done, proceeding, or occurring with promptness or rapidity, as an action, process, etc.; prompt; immediate.
a quick response.
Synonyms: expeditious, fleetAntonyms: slowthat 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.
keenly responsive; lively; acute.
a quick wit.
acting with swiftness or rapidity.
a quick worker.
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: slow(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
/ kwɪk /
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
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
to 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
Other Word Forms
- quickness noun
- unquick adjective
- unquickly adverb
- unquickness noun
- quickly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of quick1
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
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
After a quick hello, she keeps them talking as she hands over cash, asking about the flavours and whether they would sell in bulk for a party.
"England's back three are definitely very quick," she said.
As Sonia Silva prepared to leave work on Wednesday evening, she was asked by a colleague to help with a quick task.
We've worked relentlessly to bring an end to the building safety crisis and developed new measures to get peoples' homes fixed quicker and hold rogue freeholders to account.
England's players must learn how to pace it and how to restructure an innings when they lose quick wickets.
Advertisement
Related Words
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.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse