Skip to main content

perfected

/adjective, noun pur-fikt; verb per-fekt/US // adjective, noun ˈpɜr fɪkt; verb pərˈfɛkt //

完善的,完善,完美的,完备的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : conforming absolutely to the description or definition of an ideal type: a perfect sphere;a perfect gentleman.
    • : excellent or complete beyond practical or theoretical improvement: There is no perfect legal code.The proportions of this temple are almost perfect.
    • : exactly fitting the need in a certain situation or for a certain purpose: a perfect actor to play Mr. Micawber;a perfect saw for cutting out keyholes.
    • : entirely without any flaws, defects, or shortcomings: a perfect apple;the perfect crime.
    • : accurate, exact, or correct in every detail: a perfect copy.
    • : thorough; complete; utter: perfect strangers.
    • : pure or unmixed: perfect yellow.
    • : unqualified; absolute: He has perfect control over his followers.
    • : expert; accomplished; proficient: She will need a perfect driving teacher.
    • : unmitigated; out-and-out; of an extreme degree: He made a perfect fool of himself.
    • : Botany. having all parts or members present.monoclinous.
    • : Grammar. noting an action or state brought to a close prior to some temporal point of reference, in contrast to imperfect or incomplete action.designating a tense or other verb formation or construction with such meaning.
    • : Music. of or noting the consonances of unison, octave, and fifth, as distinguished from those of the third and sixth. Compare imperfect. of or noting the intervals, harmonic or melodic, of an octave, fifth, and fourth in their normal form, as opposed to augmented and diminished.
    • : Mathematics. equal to its set of accumulation points.
    • : Obsolete. assured or certain.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    Grammar.

    • : the perfect tense.
    • : a verb form or construction in the perfect tense.Compare future perfect, pluperfect, present perfect.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to bring to completion; finish.
    • : to bring to perfection; make flawless or faultless: He has succeeded in perfecting his recipe for chicken Kiev.
    • : to bring nearer to perfection; improve; make better: She works hard to perfect her writing.
    • : to make fully skilled.
    • : Printing. to print the reverse of.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • George makes a good case that Glenn was heroic without being perfect.

  • Talib’s audition was not perfect, yet there was enough for Ullman to see “something there was different.”

  • In a perfect Voronoi mosaic of hexagons in a flat plane, each cell would have six vertices.

  • Inverting historical tropes and archetypes, the story offers comedy and catharsis, and ends with a happily-ever-after so perfect it will make you return immediately to page one.

  • Joy’s words and Holmes’s art are a perfect pairing where the verse is as vivid as the paints and collage.

  • He says he has perfected the method to reduce the risk of falling ill.

  • It is perfected over many incarnations until it is transformed into pure divine love in its highest expression.

  • Simmons has perfected what you might call the exposé-as-apologia.

  • And, with this Instagram stunt, she seems to have perfected the art of crisis management.

  • In other words, she may have just perfected the art of crisis management.

  • Surely therefore to him belongs the credit of having invented and perfected the tubular boiler and surface condenser.

  • An invention is reduced to practice when it is so far perfected that it may be put into practical and successful use.

  • Johnnie Bones prepared the papers for the incorporation of the new railroad, and the organization was perfected.

  • The year, however, closed before the negociations commenced were perfected.

  • Without difficulty Clifford perfected the title to his homestead before the land officers.