Dictionary Workbench Ondict

concise

Dictionary entry view. Switch to definition mode above when you know the meaning but not the word.

concise

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++con·cise /kənˈsaɪs/ ●○○ adjective  1 SHORT/NOT LONGshort, with no unnecessary words 简洁的,简练的,简明的 SYN brief Your summary should be as clear and concise as possible. 你的总结应该尽可能地明白简洁。2 [only before noun] shorter than the original book on which something is based 〔书籍〕简略的,简缩的,简明的 the ‘Concise Dictionary of Spoken Chinese’ 《汉语口语简明词典》concisely adverbconciseness noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
conciseEven in so concise a document, ambiguity creeps in: everybody is to be allowed the right to self-defense.Saussure expressed his arguments in a concise and logical way.Make sure that your answers are as clear and concise as possible.The instruction manual is written in clear, concise English.These are mostly fairly straight forward with clear and concise instructions for jellies, jams, dumplings and suchlike.Sergeant Hanks gave us concise, sensible instructions.Cooley has such concise summaries for several authors.A concise way of illustrating it is to consider two questions.Show them how to be concise when they may have only minutes or even seconds to put over their viewpoint.clear and conciseScattered across feminist iconography, it makes points about women's issues which are usually clear and concise.The discussions are clear and concise.The text is clear and concise, although the need for extended detail on the pathogenesis of myocardial infarction is debatable.The message is clear and concise and displays no verbosity that one would expect to find in more courtly love scenes.These are mostly fairly straight forward with clear and concise instructions for jellies, jams, dumplings and suchlike.It should have been returned to the author for him to re-write in a clear and concise manner.However, it is undeniably the case that the statute is less clear and concise than ideally it ought to be.
Origin concise (1500-1600) Latin concisus, from the past participle of concidere to cut up, from com- ( → COM-) + caedere to cut
con·cise adjectiveChineseSyllable
no Corpus short, words with unnecessary


concise
concise /kənˈsaɪs/ adjective
 Date: 1500-1600
 Language: Latin
 Origin: concisus, from the past participle of concidere 'to cut up', from com- ( ⇨ COM-) + caedere 'to cut'
1. short, with no unnecessary words
   SYN  brief:
    Your summary should be as clear and concise as possible.
2. [only before noun] shorter than the original book on which something is based:
    the ‘Concise Dictionary of Spoken Chinese’
—concisely adverb
—conciseness noun [uncountable]


con·ciseBrE /kənˈsaɪs/ 🔊NAmE /kənˈsaɪs/ 🔊 adjectivegiving only the information that is necessary and important, using few words 简明的;简练的;简洁的a concise summary简明扼要的总结clear concise instructions言简意赅的说明 [only before noun] (of a book ) shorter than the original book, on which it was based 简略的;简缩的;简明的a concise dictionary简明词典 con·cise·ly BrE /kənˈsaɪsli/ 🔊NAmE /kənˈsaɪsli/ 🔊 adverb con·cise·ness (also less frequent con·ci·sion BrE /kənˈsɪʒn/ 🔊 NAmE /kənˈsɪʒn/ 🔊) noun [uncountable]