new

English dictionary entry

Meanings

adj
  1. Recently made, or created.
  2. Of recent origin; having taken place recently.
  3. Additional; recently discovered.
  4. Current or later, as opposed to former.
  5. Used to distinguish something established more recently, named after something or some place previously existing.
  6. In original condition; pristine; not previously worn or used.
  7. Refreshed, reinvigorated, reformed.
  8. Newborn.
  9. Strange, unfamiliar or not previously known.
  10. Recently arrived or appeared.
  11. Inexperienced or unaccustomed at some task.
  12. Next; about to begin or recently begun.
adv
  1. Synonym of newly, especially in composition.
  2. As new; from scratch.
noun
  1. Things that are new.
  2. A typically light-coloured lager brewed by the bottom-fermentation method.
  3. A naval cadet who has just embarked on training.
verb
  1. Synonym of new up.
  2. To make new; to recreate; to renew.
name
  1. A surname transferred from the nickname.
  2. Ellipsis of New College, Oxford.

Pronunciation

/njuː/ En-uk-new.ogg LL-Q1860 (eng)-Back ache-new.wav /nju/ /nu/ en-us-new.ogg [nɪu̯] /njʉː/ en-au-new.ogg /njʉ/ /nɪu̯/

Word forms

new newer newest noo nu newe more new most new news newing newed

Etymology

From Middle English neowe, neue, new, newe, nywe, from Old English nēowe, nīewe, nīowe, nīwe, from Proto-West Germanic *niwi, from Proto-Germanic *niwjaz (“new”), from Proto-Indo-European *néwos, *néwyos (“new”). Compare also Old English nū (“now”). More at now. Doublet of nuevo, novuss, and neo-. Cognates Cognate with Scots new (“new”), North Frisian nai, nei, nii (“new”), Saterland Frisian näi (“new”), West Frisian nij (“new”), Alemannic German nöi, nüüw (“new”), Bavarian neich (“new”), Cimbrian naüge (“new”), Dutch nieuw, nij (“new”), Dutch Low Saxon nij (“new”), German neu, new, neuw (“new”), Low German nee, neei (“new”), Luxembourgish nei (“new”), Vilamovian noj, noü (“new”), Yiddish נײַ (nay, “new”), Danish, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, and Swedish ny (“new”), Faroese nýggjur (“new”), Icelandic nýr (“new”), Gothic 𐌽𐌹𐌿𐌾𐌹𐍃 (niujis, “new”); also Breton nevez (“new”), Cornish nowydh, nowyth (“fresh, new”), Irish nua, nuadh (“new”), Manx noa (“fresh, new”), Scottish Gaelic nuadh (“fresh, new”), Welsh newydd (“new”), Latin novus (“new”), Greek νέος (néos, “young, youthful; modern, new”), Lithuanian naũjas (“new”), Belarusian но́вы (nóvy, “new”), Bulgarian and Macedonian нов (nov, “new”), Czech and Slovak nový (“new”), Polish nowy (“new”), Russian но́вый (nóvyj, “new”), Serbo-Croatian но̏в, nȍv (“new”), Slovene nov (“new”), Ukrainian нови́й (novýj, “new”), Armenian նոր (nor, “new”), Baluchi نوک (nok, “new”), Central Kurdish نوێ (nwê, “new”), Ossetian нӕуӕг (næwæg), ног (nog, “fresh, new; young”), Persian نو (naw / now, “new”), Mazanderani نو (nu, “new”), Northern Kurdish nû (“new”), Pashto نوی (nëway, “new”), Zazaki newe (“new”), Kamkata-viri nuy, nuyĩ (“new”), Prasuni unü (“new”), Hittite 𒉋𒀸 (nēwas, “fresh, new”), Luwian 𒈾𒀀𒌑𒉿𒋾 (nāúwati, “new”), Tocharian A ñu (“new”), Tocharian B ñuwe (“new”), Sanskrit नव (nava, “fresh, modern, new”), नव्य (navya, “new”).

Translations

Abkhaz: аҿыц Afrikaans: nuwe Afrikaans: nuut Ahom: 𑜉𑜧 Ahom: 𑜉𑜨𑜧 Ainu: アシㇼ Akan: foforo Aklanon: bag-o Albanian: ri Southern Altai: јаҥы Northern Amami Ōshima: 新ーさり Amharic: አዲስ Andi: цӏив Arabic: جَدِيد Arabic: حَدِيث Arabic: جديد Arabic: جَديد Juba Arabic: jediid Aragonese: nuevo Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܚܲܕܬܵܐ Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܬܵܙܵܐ Argobba: ሐጅስ Armenian: նոր Aromanian: nou Aromanian: nãu Aromanian: não Ashkun: nuŋa Assamese: নতুন Asturian: nuevu Avar: цӏияб Azerbaijani: yeni Azerbaijani: təzə Bactrian: νωγο Balinese: anyar Baluchi: نوک Bashkir: яңы Basque: berri Belarusian: но́вы Bengali: নয়া Bengali: নতুন Bhojpuri: नया Bau Bidayuh: bauh Boloki: sika Bouyei: mos Breton: nevez Bulgarian: нов Burmese: သစ် Buryat: шэнэ Carpathian Rusyn: новый Catalan: nou
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