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narrow
[nar-oh]
adjective
of little breadth or width; not broad or wide; not as wide as usual or expected.
a narrow path.
limited in extent or space; affording little room.
narrow quarters.
limited in range or scope.
a narrow sampling of public opinion.
lacking breadth of view or sympathy, as persons, the mind, or ideas.
a narrow man, knowing only his professional specialty;
a narrow mind.
with little margin to spare; barely adequate or successful; close.
a narrow escape.
careful, thorough, or minute, as a scrutiny, search, or inquiry.
limited in amount; small; meager.
narrow resources.
characterized by limited means; straitened; impoverished.
Since work was scarce, he soon found himself in narrow circumstances.
New England., stingy or parsimonious.
Phonetics.
(of a vowel) articulated with the tongue laterally constricted, as the ee of beet, the oo of boot, etc.; tense.
(of a phonetic transcription) utilizing a unique symbol for each phoneme and whatever supplementary diacritics are needed to indicate its subphonemic varieties.
(of livestock feeds) proportionately rich in protein.
verb (used without object)
to decrease in width or breadth.
This is where the road narrows.
verb (used with object)
to make narrower.
to limit or restrict (often followed bydown ): to narrow down a contest to three competitors.
to narrow an area of search;
to narrow down a contest to three competitors.
to make narrow-minded.
Living in that village has narrowed him.
noun
a narrow part, place, or thing.
a narrow part of a valley, passage, or road.
(used with a singular or plural verb), narrows, a narrow part of a strait, river, ocean current, etc.
the Narrows, a narrow strait from upper to lower New York Bay, between Staten Island and Long Island. 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) long; 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) wide.
narrow
/ ˈnærəʊ /
adjective
small in breadth, esp in comparison to length
limited in range or extent
limited in outlook; lacking breadth of vision
limited in means or resources; meagre
narrow resources
barely adequate or successful (esp in the phrase a narrow escape )
painstakingly thorough; minute
a narrow scrutiny
finance denoting an assessment of liquidity as including notes and coin in circulation with the public, banks' till money, and banks' balances Compare broad
narrow money
dialect, overcareful with money; parsimonious
phonetics
(of agricultural feeds) especially rich in protein
informal, an escape only just managed
verb
to make or become narrow; limit; restrict
noun
a narrow place, esp a pass or strait
Other Word Forms
- narrowly adverb
- narrowness noun
- overnarrow adjective
- overnarrowly adverb
- overnarrowness noun
- unnarrow adjective
- unnarrowly adverb
- unnarrowed adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of narrow1
Word History and Origins
Origin of narrow1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
The centerpiece of his line soon became an executive class “power suit” with broad shoulders and narrow hips to recall Cary Grant in the 1940s.
"With this narrowed focus, the institute may no longer be seen as the national institute for AI and data science."
The rooms are not technically built from shipping containers, but with their boxy shape, corrugated silver sides and narrow dimensions, they sure look like it.
His photograph shows the yellow-and-white train, a tangle of metal, on the corner of the narrow alley under a Subway restaurant sign, with the other train at the bottom of the hill below it.
Now Historic England experts have narrowed the minimum age range down by counting the tree's rings in a cross-section of trunk, with the wood considered to be in "good condition".
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