| wide | | |
| broad, wide | (adj.) | having great (or a certain) extent from one side to the other.; "wide roads"; "a wide necktie"; "wide margins"; "three feet wide"; "a river two miles broad"; "broad shoulders"; "a broad river" |
| across-the-board, all-embracing, all-encompassing, all-inclusive, blanket, broad, encompassing, extensive, panoptic, wide | (adj.) | broad in scope or content.; "across-the-board pay increases"; "an all-embracing definition"; "blanket sanctions against human-rights violators"; "an invention with broad applications"; "a panoptic study of Soviet nationality"; "granted him wide powers" |
| wide, wide-eyed | (adj.) | (used of eyes) fully open or extended.; "stared with wide eyes" |
| broad, spacious, wide | (adj.) | very large in expanse or scope.; "a broad lawn"; "the wide plains"; "a spacious view"; "spacious skies" |
| wide | (adj.) | great in degree.; "won by a wide margin" |
| full, wide, wide-cut | (adj.) | having ample fabric.; "the current taste for wide trousers"; "a full skirt" |
| wide, wide of the mark | (adj.) | not on target.; "the kick was wide"; "the arrow was wide of the mark"; "a claim that was wide of the truth" |
| wide | (adv.) | with or by a broad space.; "stand with legs wide apart"; "ran wide around left end" |
| wide | (adv.) | to the fullest extent possible.; "open your eyes wide"; "with the throttle wide open" |
| astray, wide | (adv.) | far from the intended target.; "the arrow went wide of the mark"; "a bullet went astray and killed a bystander" |
| wide, widely | (adv.) | to or over a great extent or range; far.; "wandered wide through many lands"; "he traveled widely" |
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