clear
adjective, clear·er, clear·est.
- (of an l-sound) having front-vowel resonance; situated before a vowel in the same syllable.Compare dark(def 16a).
- (of a speech sound) produced without frication or aspiration.
adverb, clear·er, clear·est.
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
- to comply with customs and other requirements legally imposed on entering or leaving a port (often followed by in or out).
- to leave port after having complied with such requirements.
noun
Verb Phrases
- to remove in order to make room.
- to leave; escape: We were warned to clear off before the floods came.
- to disappear; vanish: When the smoke cleared away, we saw that the house was in ruins.
- to remove the contents of: Clear out the closet.
- to remove; take away: Clear out your clothes from the closet.
- to go away, especially quickly or abruptly.
- to drive or force out: The police cleared out the pickets by force.
- to make clear; explain; solve.
- to put in order; tidy up.
- to become better or brighter, as the weather.
Idioms for clear
- absolved of blame or guilt; free: He was suspected of the theft, but evidence put him in the clear.
- en clair.
Origin of clear
SYNONYMS FOR clear
ANTONYMS FOR clear
synonym study for clear
OTHER WORDS FROM clear
Words nearby clear
Example sentences from the Web for unclear
Exactly why is unclear; their previous hacks seem to have just been for the Lulz (laughs in Internet-speak) and the attention.
Indeed, it's unclear what, if any, benefits the average Cuban will reap from increased diplomacy between the two countries.
Castro's Hipster Apologists Want to Keep Cuba ‘Authentically’ Poor |Michael Moynihan |December 18, 2014 |DAILY BEASTIt was unclear, as the protests wound down, whether there were any injuries and how many arrests had been made.
‘I Can’t Breathe’ Makes It Onto the Court for Will and Kate to See |Jacob Siegel |December 9, 2014 |DAILY BEASTSo Western governments are caught in a cat-and-mouse game and at times it is unclear who is the cat and who the mouse.
It is unclear whom the perpetrators were or what actions were taken.
Presumably Richard Tyler, but the last two letters of the surname are unclear.
Contributions From the Museum of History and Technology |Ivor Noel HumePage 367: Unclear whether the punctuation after "Ramsay Macdonald" is a comma or period.
Surely at least the unclear conception of an adaptively transformative influence of food must be discarded.
On Germinal Selection as a Source of Definite Variation |August WeismannThe phone may then ring, but for a moment it can be unclear whether we are just imagining this.
When You Don't Know Where to Turn |Steven J. BartlettIt is unclear, metaphysical, and whatever good there is in it, I spoil.
The Journal of Leo Tolstoi (First Volume--1895-1899) |Leo Tolstoi
British Dictionary definitions for unclear (1 of 2)
adjective
Derived forms of unclear
unclearly, adverb unclearness, nounBritish Dictionary definitions for unclear (2 of 2)
adjective
adverb
noun
- free of suspicion, guilt, or blame
- sport able to receive a pass without being tackled
verb
- (of the weather) to become free from dullness, fog, rain, etc
- (of mist, fog, etc) to disappear
- to achieve transmission of (a signalled message) and acknowledgment of its receipt at its destination
- to decode (a message, etc)
Derived forms of clear
clearable, adjective clearer, noun clearness, nounWord Origin for clear
Idioms and Phrases with unclear
In addition to the idioms beginning with clear
- clear as a bell
- clear as crystal
- clear as mud
- clear away
- clear off
- clear one's name
- clear out
- clear the air
- clear the decks
- clear the table
- clear up
- clear with
also see:
- coast is clear
- free and clear
- have a clear conscience
- in the clear
- loud and clear
- out of a clear blue sky
- see one's way (clear)
- steer clear of