shabd-logo

Meaning of અસ્પષ્ટ in English

  • Wandering; straying from the right way.
  • Deviating from the ordinary or natural type; exceptional; abnormal.
  • To diminish the sensibility of; to debilitate.
  • Characterized by abirritation or debility.
  • Exceptional.
  • To renounce upon oath; to forswear; to disavow; as, to abjure allegiance to a prince. To abjure the realm, is to swear to abandon it forever.
  • To renounce or reject with solemnity; to recant; to abandon forever; to reject; repudiate; as, to abjure errors.
  • To renounce on oath.
  • One who abjures.
  • of Abjure
  • Pertaining to absolutism; absolutist.
  • That may be absolved.
  • To take one's self off; to decamp.
  • Characterized by abstinence; self-restraining.
  • Serving to cleanse, detergent.
  • A substance used in cleansing; a detergent; as, soap is an abstergent.
  • To consume gradually; to waste away.
  • Without a lip.
  • Resting satisfied or submissive; disposed tacitly to submit; assentive; as, an acquiescent policy.
  • Executed in a workmanlike manner; ingeniously made.
  • In a flaunting state or position.
  • Circumlocutory; circuitous.
  • Ambagious.
  • Doubtful or uncertain, particularly in respect to signification; capable of being understood in either of two or more possible senses; equivocal; as, an ambiguous course; an ambiguous expression.
  • Two-edged instead of round; -- said of certain flattened stems, as those of blue grass, and rarely also of leaves.
  • Alt. of Anginose
  • Proving indirectly, by showing the absurdity, or impossibility of the contrary.
  • Defective digestion, indigestion.
  • Serving to open; aperient.
  • Resembling aphanite; having a very fine-grained structure.
  • Pertaining to, or affected by, aphasia; speechless.
  • Turning away from the sun; -- said of leaves, etc.
  • Umbelliferous.
  • Situated at, or near, the apex; apical.
  • Having no radiating processes; -- applied particularly to certain nerve cells.
  • Designed to facilitate discharges of phlegm or mucus from mouth or nostrils.
  • An apophlegmatic medicine.
  • Pertaining to, or partaking of the nature of, an aposteme.
  • To impair; to grow worse.
  • Capable of being apprehended or conceived.
  • Annexed or pertaining to some more important thing; accessory; incident; as, a right of way appurtenant to land or buildings.
  • Something which belongs or appertains to another thing; an appurtenance.
  • Relating to apyrexy.
  • Destitute of seeds; aspermatous.
  • Of or relating to asphyxia; as, asphyxial phenomena.
  • Alt. of Asphyxied
  • Affected with, or pertaining to, astigmatism; as, astigmatic eyes; also, remedying astigmatism; as, astigmatic lenses.
  • Melancholic or hypochondriac; atrabiliary.
  • Actuated by avarice; greedy of gain; immoderately desirous of accumulating property.
  • Having awns; bearded.
  • Nitrous; as, azotous acid.
  • of Bespeak
  • Connected with, or proceeding from, the blastema; blastemal.
  • To cry, as a calf or sheep; to bleat; to make a senseless noise; to talk inconsiderately.
  • To utter inconsiderately.
  • Without color; pale; pallid.
  • Desolate and exposed; swept by cold winds.
  • Cold and cutting; cheerless; as, a bleak blast.
  • A small European river fish (Leuciscus alburnus), of the family Cyprinidae; the blay.
  • Bleak.
  • To affect with blight; to blast; to prevent the growth and fertility of.
  • Hence: To destroy the happiness of; to ruin; to mar essentially; to frustrate; as, to blight one's prospects.
  • To be affected by blight; to blast; as, this vine never blights.
  • Mildew; decay; anything nipping or blasting; -- applied as a general name to various injuries or diseases of plants, causing the whole or a part to wither, whether occasioned by insects, fungi, or atmospheric influences.
  • The act of blighting, or the state of being blighted; a withering or mildewing, or a stoppage of growth in the whole or a part of a plant, etc.
  • That which frustrates one's plans or withers one's hopes; that which impairs or destroys.
  • A downy species of aphis, or plant louse, destructive to fruit trees, infesting both the roots and branches; -- also applied to several other injurious insects.
  • A rashlike eruption on the human skin.
  • One who, or that which, blinds.
  • One of the leather screens on a bridle, to hinder a horse from seeing objects at the side; a blinker.
  • The act of blowing; a roaring wind; a blast.
  • Having blotches.
  • of Blubber
  • Swollen; turgid; as, a blubbered lip.
  • The act of weeping noisily.
  • of Blunder
  • of Blur
  • Full of blurs; blurred.
  • of Blurt
  • of Castigate
  • Punitive in order to amendment; corrective.
  • An instrument formerly used to punish and correct arrant scolds; -- called also a ducking stool, or trebucket.
  • Resembling clods; gross; low; stupid; boorish.
  • Marked by, or causing, complacence.
  • Wasting away gradually.
  • Silent.
  • Exhibiting contumacy; contemning authority; obstinate; perverse; stubborn; disobedient.
  • Willfully disobedient to the summous or prders of a court.
  • Exhibiting contumely; rudely contemptuous; insolent; disdainful.
  • Shameful; disgraceful.
  • of Dally
  • Capable of being deciphered; as, old writings not decipherable.
  • Decrepitude.
  • of Defalcate
  • Liable to defect; imperfect.
  • Full of defiance; bold; insolent; as, a defiant spirit or act.
  • One who dares and defies; a contemner; as, a defier of the laws.
  • Capable of being deflected.
  • Bearing or bringing forth a god; -- said of the Virgin Mary.
  • One who despairs.
  • A reckless, furious man; a person urged by furious passions, and regardless of consequence; a wild ruffian.
  • A bower; a dingle.
  • Capable of being diminished or lessened.
  • Sending away; dismissing to another jurisdiction; granting leave to depart.
  • of Dim
  • Alt. of Dimmy
  • Somewhat dim; as, dimmish eyes.
  • Same as Dimyarian.
  • Capable of being directed; steerable; as, a dirigible balloon.
  • To render unacquainted; to make unfamiliar.
  • Not disposed to affection; unfriendly; disaffected.
  • To reduce from the privileges of a forest to the state of common ground; to exempt from forest laws.
  • To misbecome.
  • Bearing the stamens on a discoid outgrowth of the receptacle; -- said of a subclass of plants. Cf. Calycifloral.
  • Incoherent.
  • To scatter in fight; to put to rout; to defeat.
  • To break up and frustrate the plans of; to balk/ to throw into perplexity and dejection; to disconcert.
  • Discomfited; overthrown.
  • Rout; overthrow; discomfiture.
  • Inconvenient; troublesome; incommodious.
  • To dissuade.
  • One who discountenances; one who disfavors.
  • Uncivil; rude; wanting in courtesy or good manners; uncourteous.
  • To dissolve covenant with.
  • Serving to disperse morbid matter; discussive; as, a discutient application.
  • An agent (as a medicinal application) which serves to disperse morbid matter.
  • Having two sepals; two-sepaled.
  • One who disfavors.
  • To disable.
  • To disparage.
  • To disinherit.
  • of Dishevel
  • Not noble; unbecoming true honor or dignity; mean; unworthy; as, disingenuous conduct or schemes.
  • Not ingenuous; wanting in noble candor or frankness; not frank or open; uncandid; unworthily or meanly artful.
  • Not influenced by regard to personal interest or advantage; free from selfish motive; having no relation of interest or feeling; not biased or prejudiced; as, a disinterested decision or judge.
  • of Disjoin
  • of Disjoint
  • Tending to disjoin; separating; disjoining.
  • Pertaining to disjunct tetrachords.
  • A disjunctive conjunction.
  • A disjunctive proposition.
  • To deprive of life.
  • To turn away from the west; to throw out of reckoning as to longitude.
  • One who disparages or dishonors; one who vilifies or disgraces.
  • To scatter abroad.
  • of Dispeople
  • of Disquiet
  • One who, or that which, disquiets, or makes uneasy; a disturber.
  • Relating to disquisition; fond discussion or investigation; examining; inquisitive.
  • Disquisitory.
  • Not reputable; of bad repute; not in esteem; dishonorable; disgracing the reputation; tending to bring into disesteem; as, it is disreputable to associate familiarly with the mean, the lewd, and the profane.
  • To become unsheathed.
  • Starting asunder; bursting and opening with an elastic force; dehiscing explosively; as, a dissilient pericarp.
  • Capable of being scattered or dissipated.
  • Tending to dissipate.
  • A dissuasive.
  • Disposed in two vertical rows; two-ranked.
  • Applied to an acid having in each molecule two atoms of sulphur in the higher state of oxidation.
  • One who, or that which, disjoins or causes disunion.
  • Stupid; doltish.
  • A kind of indigestion; a state of the stomach in which its functions are disturbed, without the presence of other diseases, or, if others are present, they are of minor importance. Its symptoms are loss of appetite, nausea, heartburn, acrid or fetid eructations, a sense of weight or fullness in the stomach, etc.
  • Breaking out; -- said of certain fungi which burst through the texture of leaves.
  • Soundness of the nutritive or digestive organs; good concoction or digestion; -- opposed to dyspepsia.
  • Serving to unfold or explain; tending to lay open to the understanding; explanatory.
  • See Exsanguious.
  • Destitute of blood.
  • Destitute of true, or red, blood, as insects.
  • Tending to make dry; having the power of drying.
  • Relating to the inspection of entrails for prognostication.
  • Doing nothing; shiftless.
  • A do-nothing; an idle fellow; a sluggard.
  • Yellow; fal/ow; dun.
  • A horse of a favel or dun color.
  • Flattery; cajolery; deceit.
  • Febrific.
  • That which causes fever.
  • Producing fever.
  • One in whom the property of an estate is vested, subject to the estate of a life renter.
  • The price of grain, as legally fixed, in the counties of Scotland, for the current year.
  • Fiendish; diabolical.
  • Of a definite form or figure.
  • Figurative; metaphorical.
  • Florid; figurative; involving passing discords by the freer melodic movement of one or more parts or voices in the harmony; as, figurate counterpoint or descant.
  • Suspended by, or strung upon, a thread; -- said of tuberous swellings in the middle or at the extremities of slender, threadlike rootlets.
  • Having the edge or extremity bordered by filiform processes thicker than hairs; fringed; as, the fimbriate petals of the pink; the fimbriate end of the Fallopian tube.
  • To hem; to fringe.
  • of Fimbriate
  • A fan.
  • Liable to be blown about.
  • of Flaunt
  • Full of folly.
  • Fruitful; productive; profitable.
  • Of or pertaining to wheat or grain.
  • The tail of a hare, coney, etc.
  • Woolen waste, for mixing with mungo and shoddy.
  • Smoky; hence, fond of smoking; addicted to smoking tobacco.
  • Given to theft; thievish.
  • Capable of being furbished.
  • Made of bran; furfuraceous.
  • Not firmly woven; that ravels.
  • Furnished with fuzz; having fuzz; like fuzz; as, the fuzzy skin of a peach.
  • Worried; flurried; frightened.
  • A natural covered opening in the earth; a cave; also, an artificial recess, cave, or cavernlike apartment.
  • In droplike form.
  • Downward convexity, or convexity of the inferior surface.
  • To bathe; to wash freely; to immerce.
  • To paint; to adorn with colors.
  • Unpalatable.
  • Not palpable; that cannot be felt; extremely fine, so that no grit can be perceived by touch.
  • Not material; intangible; incorporeal.
  • Not apprehensible, or readily apprehensible, by the mind; unreal; as, impalpable distinctions.
  • of Imparadise
  • Having an odd number of fingers or toes, either one, three, or five, as in the horse, tapir, rhinoceros, etc.
  • Not consisting of an equal number of syllables; as, an imparisyllabic noun, one which has not the same number of syllables in all the cases; as, lapis, lapidis; mens, mentis.
  • One who imparts.
  • Not having money; habitually without money; poor.
  • Not perceived.
  • Unable to perceive.
  • Not perceiving, or not able to perceive.
  • Not destructible.
  • Commanding; ascendant; imperial; lordly; majestic.
  • Haughly; arrogant; overbearing; as, an imperious tyrant; an imperious manner.
  • Imperative; urgent; compelling.
  • Not persevering; fickle; thoughtless.
  • Not perspicuous; not clear; obscure; vague; ambeguous.
  • Not pertinent; not pertaining to the matter in hand; having no bearing on the subject; not to the point; irrelevant; inapplicable.
  • Contrary to, or offending against, the rules of propriety or good breeding; guilty of, or prone to, rude, unbecoming, or uncivil words or actions; as, an impertient coxcomb; an impertient remark.
  • Trifing; inattentive; frivolous.
  • An impertinent person.
  • In an impertinent manner.
  • Incapable of being passed through.
  • Not perturbed.
  • To affict with pestilence; to infect, as with plague.
  • To pierce; to penetrate.
  • Not capable of being pierced; impenetrable.
  • of Impinge
  • Not pliable; inflexible; inyielding.
  • Imponderable.
  • One who impounds.
  • To advance on loan.
  • A kind of earnest money; loan; -- specifically, money advanced for some public service, as in enlistment.
  • of Imprest
  • Not prosperous.
  • Not having arrived at puberty; immature.
  • of Impugn
  • To color or tinge with purple; to make red or reddish; to purple; as, a field impurpled with blood.
  • Incapable of being lost.
  • Not apprehensive; regardless; unconcerned.
  • Inauspicious.
  • Uncivil; rude.
  • Not coagulable.
  • In an incoherent manner; without due connection of parts.
  • Not concinnous; unsuitable; discordant.
  • Not congealable; incapable of being congealed.
  • Unconscionable.
  • Not considerable; unworthy of consideration or notice; unimportant; small; trivial; as, an inconsiderable distance; an inconsiderable quantity, degree, value, or sum.
  • Not conspicuous or noticeable; hardly discernible.
  • Not contestable; not to be disputed; that cannot be called in question or controverted; incontrovertible; indisputable; as, incontestable evidence, truth, or facts.
  • Not curious or inquisitive; without care for or interest in; inattentive; careless; negligent; heedless.
  • Searching; exploring; investigating.
  • Not decorous; violating good manners; contrary to good breeding or etiquette; unbecoming; improper; out of place; as, indecorous conduct.
  • Not defectible; unfailing; not liable to defect, failure, or decay.
  • Not defective; perfect; complete.
  • Remaining closed at maturity, or not opening along regular lines, as the acorn, or a cocoanut.
  • Done without deliberation; unpremeditated.
  • Indiscreet.
  • Not discrete or separated; compact; homogenous.
  • Not distinct or distinguishable; not separate in such a manner as to be perceptible by itself; as, the indistinct parts of a substance.
  • Obscure to the mind or senses; not clear; not definite; confused; imperfect; faint; as, indistinct vision; an indistinct sound; an indistinct idea or recollection.
  • Having nothing distinctive; common.
  • In a indistinguishable manner.
  • Indistinct.
  • Intoxicating.
  • Anything that intoxicates, as opium, alcohol, etc.; an intoxicant.
  • Intoxicated, or partially so; intoxicating.
  • Not elaborate; not wrought with care; unpolished; crude; unfinished.
  • Not explicit; not clearly stated; indefinite; vague.
  • Inferable.
  • A person dwelling in, or having charge of, an infirmary, esp. in a monastic institution.
  • Tasteless; insipid.
  • Not salubrious or healthful; unwholesome; as, an insalubrious air or climate.
  • Careless; heedless; indifferent; unconcerned.
  • Not capable of being submerged; buoyant.
  • The state or quality of being unaccustomed; absence of use or habit.
  • Incapable of being suffered, borne, or endured; insupportable; unendurable; intolerable; as, insufferable heat, cold, or pain; insufferable wrongs.
  • Offensive beyond endurance; detestable.
  • Incapable of being passed over or surmounted; insurmountable; as, insuperable difficulties.
  • Incapable of being supposed; not supposable; inconceivable.
  • That can not be suppressed or concealed; irrepressible.
  • Insuppressible.
  • Not remitting; unforgiving.
  • Not reprehensible; blameless; innocent.
  • Not resilient; not recoiling or rebounding; inelastic.
  • Not reverent; showing a want of reverence; expressive of a want of veneration; as, an irreverent babbler; an irreverent jest.
  • Alt. of Lapidifical
  • of Lapidify
  • Wanton; lewd; lustful; as, lascivious men; lascivious desires.
  • Tending to produce voluptuous or lewd emotions.
  • Given to deception or falsehood; lying; as, a mendacious person.
  • False; counterfeit; containing falsehood; as, a mendacious statement.
  • Having the jaws slightly projecting; between prognathous and orthognathous. See Gnathic index, under Gnathic.
  • To perform Mass.
  • Mutilated; defective; imperfect.
  • Absent-minded; dazed; muddled; stupid.
  • Of or pertaining to marriage; done or used at a wedding; as, nuptial rites and ceremonies.
  • Marriage; wedding; nuptial ceremony; -- now only in the plural.
  • Having the form or the use of an oar; as, the swan's oary feet.
  • Conical, but having the apex downward; inversely conical.
  • Alt. of Obfirmate
  • One who obscures; one who prevents enlightenment or hinders the progress of knowledge and wisdom.
  • Covered over, shaded, or darkened; destitute of light; imperfectly illuminated; dusky; dim.
  • Of or pertaining to darkness or night; inconspicuous to the sight; indistinctly seen; hidden; retired; remote from observation; unnoticed.
  • Not noticeable; humble; mean.
  • Not easily understood; not clear or legible; abstruse or blind; as, an obscure passage or inscription.
  • Not clear, full, or distinct; clouded; imperfect; as, an obscure view of remote objects.
  • To render obscure; to darken; to make dim; to keep in the dark; to hide; to make less visible, intelligible, legible, glorious, beautiful, or illustrious.
  • To conceal one's self; to hide; to keep dark.
  • Obscurity.
  • of Obscure
  • One who, or that which, obscures.
  • Of or pertaining to a siege.
  • To seal; to confirm, as by a seal or stamp.
  • Ratifying; confirming by sealing.
  • Fitted to excite hatred; hateful.
  • Yielding odors; fragrant.
  • Opaque.
  • of Opalesce
  • The principal opercular bone or operculum of fishes.
  • Bearing an operculum.
  • Producing an operculum; -- said of the foot, or part of the foot, of certain mollusks.
  • Ophidian.
  • Of or pertaining to ophiology.
  • Sumptuous.
  • Having small bones.
  • A place where the bones of the dead are deposited; a charnel house.
  • To make an ambitious display of; to show or exhibit boastingly.
  • The mouth of a river; an estuary.
  • One who keeps the door, especially the door of a church; a porter.
  • of Palliate
  • Alt. of Panduriform
  • Without a pang; painless.
  • of Paper
  • Growing by the side of a petal, as a stamen.
  • Excessive care or diligence.
  • A bombastic or labored style.
  • Perk; pert; jaunty; trim.
  • A perturber.
  • One who, or that which, perturbs, or cause perturbation.
  • More than perfect; past perfect; -- said of the tense which denotes that an action or event was completed at or before the time of another past action or event.
  • The pluperfect tense; also, a verb in the pluperfect tense.
  • To impound, as cattle.
  • To distrain.
  • Grass-green; clear, lively green, without any mixture.
  • Ripe or mature before the proper or natural time; early or prematurely ripe or developed; as, precocious trees.
  • Developed more than is natural or usual at a given age; exceeding what is to be expected of one's years; too forward; -- used especially of mental forwardness; as, a precocious child; precocious talents.
  • Tasting beforehand; having a foretaste.
  • Treacherous; perfidious; traitorous.
  • Apt to make unexpected revelations.
  • Proterandrous.
  • The body or office of the quindecemviri.
  • Full of rancor; evincing, or caused by, rancor; deeply malignant; implacably spiteful or malicious; intensely virulent.
  • Of or pertaining to a natural order of plants (Ranunculaceae), of which the buttercup is the type, and which includes also the virgin's bower, the monkshood, larkspur, anemone, meadow rue, and peony.
  • Raptorial.
  • Ecstatic; transporting; ravishing; feeling, expressing, or manifesting rapture; as, rapturous joy, pleasure, or delight; rapturous applause.
  • of Ravish
  • Rapturous; transporting.
  • Ready for the razor; fit to be shaved.
  • Laughing; laughable; exciting gayety; gay; merry; delightful to the view, as a landscape.
  • Growing along the banks of rivers; riparian.
  • of Rive
  • p. p. & a. from Rive.
  • generating or producing dew.
  • One who engages in rows, or noisy quarrels; a ruffianly fellow.
  • Scoriaceous.
  • Thin; lean.
  • Having or producing scurf; covered with scurf; resembling scurf.
  • Using the low and indecent language of the meaner sort of people, or such as only the license of buffoons can warrant; as, a scurrilous fellow.
  • Containing low indecency or abuse; mean; foul; vile; obscenely jocular; as, scurrilous language.
  • of Slur
  • Marked with a slur; performed in a smooth, gliding style, like notes marked with a slur.
  • Of or pertaining to a somnambulist or somnambulism; affected by somnambulism; appropriate to the state of a somnambulist.
  • Somnial; somniatory.
  • Of or pertaining to a sophomore; resembling a sophomore; hence, pretentious; inflated in style or manner; as, sophomoric affectation.
  • Furnished with stamens; producing stamens.
  • Having stamens, but lacking pistils.
  • To indue with stamina.
  • A slight gleam or glimmer; a glimpse.
  • Alt. of Stipular
  • To add to beyond saturation; as, to supersaturate a solution.
  • Moving with a slow pace or motion; slow; not swift.
  • Not being inseason; late; dilatory; -- opposed to prompt; as, to be tardy in one's payments.
  • Unwary; unready.
  • Criminal; guilty.
  • To make tardy.
  • Having thin or narrow leaves.
  • of Tepefy
  • Affected with tormina; griping.
  • Transparent; pervious to the sight.
  • Of or performance to trap; resembling trap, or partaking of its form or qualities; trappy.
  • Facing three ways; arranged in three vertical ranks, as the leaves of veratrum.
  • Any one of numerous species of bright-colored American birds belonging to Icterus and allied genera, especially Icterus icterus, a native of the West Indies and South America. Many of the species are called orioles in America.
  • Destitute of turf.
  • Of or pertaining to a suborder of urticaceous plants, of which the elm is the type.
  • Howling; wailing.
  • To set free from the influence of guile; to undeceive.
  • Ounce by ounce.
  • Incapable of being cleansed or cleaned.
  • Unable to comprehend.
  • Incomprehensible.
  • Inconspicuous.
  • To loose, as dogs, from their couples; also, to set loose; to disconnect; to disjoin; as, to uncouple railroad cars.
  • To roam at liberty.
  • Of the nature or quality of an unguent or ointment; fatty; oily; greasy.
  • Having a smooth, greasy feel, as certain minerals.
  • Bland; suave; also, tender; fervid; as, an unctuous speech; sometimes, insincerely suave or fervid.
  • To free from deafness; to cause to hear.
  • Indefatigable.
  • Indefeasible.
  • To make indefinite; to obliterate or confuse the definition or limitations of.
  • To study, as another actor's part, in order to be his substitute in an emergency; to study another actor's part.
  • One who studies another's part with a view to assuming it in an emergency.
  • The tenant of a tenant; one who holds lands or tenements of a tenant or lessee.
  • Having no artful, ulterior, or fraudulent purpose; sincere; artless; simple.
  • Not differentiated; specifically (Biol.), homogenous, or nearly so; -- said especially of young or embryonic tissues which have not yet undergone differentiation (see Differentiation, 3), that is, which show no visible separation into their different structural parts.
  • Indigestible.
  • To put off; to lay aside, as a garment.
  • To unfold, or render single.
  • Undulating.
  • Not equivocal; not doubtful; not ambiguous; evident; sincere; plain; as, unequivocal evidence; unequivocal words.
  • Not exact; inexact.
  • Inexcusable.
  • Inexpensive.
  • Not expert; inexpert.
  • Inexpressible.
  • Not failing; not liable to fail; inexhaustible; certain; sure.
  • Not fertile; infertile; barren.
  • Like an unguent, or partaking of its qualities.
  • Incapable of being mastered or subdued.
  • Impartial.
  • Impatient.
  • To mar or destroy the perfection of.
  • Imperfect.
  • Implacable.
  • To deprive of a plaid.
  • To deprive of polish; to make impolite.
  • Impossible.
  • Uneasiness; inquietude.
  • Doing or done without sight; not seeing or examining.
  • To remove, as a planet, from its sphere or orb.
  • To dispirit.
  • Intangible.
  • To deprive of a taste for a thing.
  • To deprive of a tongue, or of voice.
  • Given to, or characterized by, vagaries; capricious; whimsical; crochety.
  • A wandering or strolling.
  • Hence, a wandering of the thoughts; a wild or fanciful freak; a whim; a whimsical purpose.
  • Crying like a child.
  • Wandering; unsettled.
  • Moving without certain direction; wandering; erratic; unsettled.
  • Wandering from place to place without any settled habitation; as, a vagrant beggar.
  • One who strolls from place to place; one who has no settled habitation; an idle wanderer; a sturdy beggar; an incorrigible rogue; a vagabond.
  • Wandering; vagrant; vagabond.
  • Unsettled; unfixed; undetermined; indefinite; ambiguous; as, a vague idea; a vague proposition.
  • Proceeding from no known authority; unauthenticated; uncertain; flying; as, a vague report.
  • An indefinite expanse.
  • To wander; to roam; to stray.
  • A wandering; a vagary.

Meaning of અસ્પષ્ટ in English

English usage of અસ્પષ્ટ

    Synonyms of ‘અસ્પષ્ટ

      Articles Related to ‘અસ્પષ્ટ

        Browse Other Words By Clicking On Letters

        A
        B
        C
        D
        E
        F
        G
        H
        I
        J
        K
        L
        M
        N
        O
        P
        Q
        R
        S
        T
        U
        V
        W
        X
        Y
        Z
        A
        B
        C
        D
        E
        F
        G
        H
        I
        J
        K
        L
        M
        N
        O
        P
        Q
        R
        S
        T
        U
        V
        W
        X
        Y
        Z