plain |
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1. adj. (now rare, regional) Flat, level. | |
2. adj. Simple. | |
3. adj. Ordinary; lacking adornment or ornamentation; unembellished. | |
He was dressed simply in plain black clothes. | |
a plain tune | |
4. adj. Of just one colour; lacking a pattern. | |
a plain pink polycotton skirt | |
5. adj. Simple in habits or qualities; unsophisticated, not exceptional, ordinary. | |
They're just plain people like you or me. | |
6. adj. (of food) Having only few ingredients, or no additional ingredients or seasonings; not elaborate, without toppings or extras. | |
Would you like a poppy bagel or a plain bagel? | |
7. adj. (computing) Containing no extended or nonprinting characters (especially in plain text). | |
8. adj. Obvious. | |
9. adj. Evident to one's senses or reason; manifest, clear, unmistakable. | |
10. adj. Downright; total, unmistakable (as intensifier). | |
His answer was just plain nonsense. | |
11. adj. Open. | |
12. adj. Honest and without deception; candid, open; blunt. | |
Let me be plain with you: I don't like her. | |
13. adj. Clear; unencumbered; equal; fair. | |
14. adj. Not unusually beautiful; unattractive. | |
Throughout high school she worried that she had a rather plain face. | |
15. adv. (colloquial) Simply | |
It was just plain stupid. | |
I plain forgot. | |
16. n. (rare, poetic) A lamentation. | |
17. v. (reflexive, obsolete) To complain. | |
18. v. (ambitransitive, now rare, poetic) To lament, bewail. | |
to plain a loss | |
19. n. An expanse of land with relatively low relief. | |
20. n. A battlefield. | |
21. n. (obsolete) A plane. | |
22. v. (obsolete, transitive) To level; to raze; to make plain or even on the surface. | |
23. v. (obsolete, transitive) To make plain or manifest; to explain. | |