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clean
- 1clean
- Pronunciation:
- \ˈklēn\
- Function:
- adjective
- Etymology:
- Middle English clene, from Old English clę̄ne; akin to Old
High German kleini delicate, dainty
- Date:
- before 12th century
1 a:
free from dirt or pollution <changed to clean clothes> <clean
solar energy> b: free from contamination
or disease <a clean wound> c:
free or relatively free from radioactivity <a clean atomic explosion>2 a: unadulterated , pure <the clean thrill of one's first flight> bof
a precious stone : having no interior flaws visible c: free from growth that hinders tillage <clean farmland>3 a: free from moral corruption
or sinister connections of any kind <a candidate with a clean record>
; also : free from violations <a clean
driving record> b: free from offensive
treatment of sexual subjects and from the use of obscenity <a clean joke> c: observing the rules : fair <a clean fight>4: ceremonially or spiritually pure <and all who are clean
may eat flesh — Leviticus 7:19(Revised Standard Version)>5 a: thorough , complete <a clean break with the past> b:
deftly executed : skillful <clean ballet technique> c:
hit beyond the reach of an opponent <a clean single to center>6 a: relatively free from error or blemish :
clear ; specifically : legible <clean copy> b:
unencumbered <clean bill of sale>7
a: characterized by clarity and precision : trim <a clean prose style> <architecture with clean almost austere
lines> b: even , smooth <a clean edge> <a sharp blow causing a clean break>
c: free from impedances to smooth flow (as of water
or air) <a clean airplane> <a ship with a clean bottom>8 a: empty <the ship returned with a clean hold> b:
free from drug addiction <has been clean for six months> cslang
: having no contraband (as weapons or drugs) in one's possession9: habitually neat
— clean·ness \ˈklēn-nəs\ noun
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