- indeed
- adverb Date: 14th century 1. without any question ; truly, undeniably — often used interjectionally to express irony or disbelief or surprise 2. in reality 3. all things considered ; as a matter of fact
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
Indeed — Création 2004 Fondateurs Paul Forster et Rony Kahan Slogan « un clic. tous les emplois. » … Wikipédia en Français
Indeed — In*deed , adv. [Prep. in + deed.] In reality; in truth; in fact; verily; truly; used in a variety of senses. Esp.: (a) Denoting emphasis; as, indeed it is so. (b) Denoting concession or admission; as, indeed, you are right. (c) Denoting surprise; … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
indeed — [in dēd′] adv. [ME indede: see IN1, prep. & DEED] certainly; truly; admittedly: often used for emphasis or confirmation [ it is indeed warm ] or, in questions, to seek confirmation [ did she indeed tell you that? ] interj. used to express… … English World dictionary
indeed — early 14c., in dede in fact, in truth, from O.E. dæd (see DEED (Cf. deed)). Written as two words till c.1600. As an interjection, 1590s; as an expression of surprise or disgust, 1834. Emphatic form in yes (or no) indeedy attested from 1856,… … Etymology dictionary
indeed — [adv] actually absolutely, amen*, certainly, doubtlessly, easily, even, for real, in point of fact, in truth, much, naturally, of course, positively, really, strictly, surely, sure thing*, to be sure, truly, undeniably, undoubtedly, verily,… … New thesaurus
indeed — ► ADVERB 1) used to emphasize a statement, description, or response. 2) used to introduce a further and stronger or more surprising point. 3) used in a response to express interest, incredulity, or contempt. ORIGIN originally as in deed … English terms dictionary
indeed — [[t]ɪndi͟ːd[/t]] ♦♦ 1) ADV: ADV with v, ADV with cl/group (emphasis) You use indeed to confirm or agree with something that has just been said. Later, he admitted that the payments had indeed been made... He did indeed keep important documents… … English dictionary
indeed */*/*/ — UK [ɪnˈdiːd] / US [ɪnˈdɪd] adverb Summary: Indeed can be used in the following ways: as an adverb (following very and an adjective or another adverb): The results were very good indeed. as a way of showing how a sentence or phrase is related to… … English dictionary
indeed — in|deed [ ın did ] function word *** Indeed can be used in the following ways: as an adverb (following very and an adjective or another adverb) mainly in British English: The results were very good indeed. as a way of showing how a sentence or… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
indeed — in|deed W1S3 [ınˈdi:d] adv [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: in + deed] 1.) [sentence adverb] used to emphasize a statement or answer ▪ The blood tests prove that Vince is indeed the father. ▪ Would it help if you had an assistant? It would indeed. 2.)… … Dictionary of contemporary English
indeed — /In di:d/ adverb 1 (sentence adverb) used to emphasize a statement or answer: “Would it help if you had an assistant?” “It would, indeed.” | There are few, if indeed any, authors with such a gift for dialogue. 2 formal used to introduce… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English