Apedia

Depth Water Metres Great Depθ I Found Despair

Word depth
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / depθ / NAmE / depθ /
Example
  • what's the depth of the water here?
  • water was found at a depth of 30 metres.
  • they dug down to a depth of two metres.
  • many dolphins can dive to depths of 200 metres.
Sound Native audio playback is not supported.
Image
Search images by the word
https://www.google.com/search?biw=1280&bih=661&tbm=isch&sa=1&q=depth
Content

depth

(noun)BrE / depθ / NAmE / depθ /
  1. the distance from the top or surface to the bottom of something
    • What's the depth of the water here?
    • Water was found at a depth of 30 metres.
    • They dug down to a depth of two metres.
    • Many dolphins can dive to depths of 200 metres.
    • The oil well extended several hundreds of feet in depth.
    • the depth of a cut/wound/crack
  2. the distance from the front to the back of something
    • The depth of the shelves is 30 centimetres.
  3. the strength and power of feelings
    • the depth of her love
  4. the quality of knowing or understanding a lot of details about something; the ability to provide and explain these details
    • a writer of great wisdom and depth
    • a job that doesn’t require any great depth of knowledge
    • His ideas lack depth.
  5. the deepest, most extreme or serious part of something
    • the depths of the ocean
    • to live in the depths of the country (= a long way from a town)
    • in the depths of winter (= when it is coldest)
    • She was in the depths of despair.
    • He gazed into the depths of her eyes.
    • Her paintings reveal hidden depths (= unknown and interesting things about her character).
  6. the strength of a colour
    • Strong light will affect the depth of colour of your carpets and curtains.
  7. the quality in a work of art or a photograph which makes it appear not to be flat
    • See related entries: Describing art
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/topic/describing_art/depth
  8. to be in water that is too deep to stand in with your head above water
    • If you can't swim, don't go out of your depth.
  9. to be unable to understand something because it is too difficult; to be in a situation that you cannot control
    • He felt totally out of his depth in his new job.
  10. in a detailed and thorough way
    • I haven't looked at the report in depth yet.
    • an in-depth study
  11. to be or to experience an extreme example of something unpleasant
    • His latest novel plumbs the depths of horror and violence.
    • It was at that stage in her life when she plumbed the depths of despair.
    • The team's poor performances plumbed new depths last night when they lost 10–2.

    Extra Examples

    • I don’t like going out of my depth in the sea.
    • I studied phonology in depth at college.
    • I suspect she has hidden depths.
    • It lacks the complexity or depth of his best movies.
    • The camera must be strong enough to resist the immense water pressure at depth.
    • The clam burrows in the sand to a considerable depth.
    • The demonstration showed the depth of feeling against the war.
    • The rejection plunged her into the dark depths of despair.
    • The ship’s mast finally disappeared into the watery depths.
    • The story plumbed the depths of tabloid journalism.
    • The writer seems a little out of her depth when dealing with the emotional issue involved.
    • These fish are found at a depth of over 100 metres.
    • They go down to great depths below the surface.
    • Water normally moves more slowly at shallower depths.
    • Younger students cannot be expected to have great depth of understanding.
    • music of great emotional depth
    • sharks lurking in the murky depths
    • sharks lurking in the murky grey depths of the sea
    • species that live at considerable depth
    • the abyssal depths of the ocean
    • the unexpected depth of his feelings for her
    • He tried to establish the depth of the wound.
    • The oil well extended several hundreds of feet in depth.
    • What’s the depth of the water here?
    • a job that doesn’t require any great depth of knowledge

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English: from deep + -th, on the pattern of pairs such as long, length.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Tags: d

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Derive derived dɪˈraɪv verb bre children great pleasure

Previous card: Depressing dɪˈpresɪŋ found experience adjective bre sight/thought/experience job

Up to card list: [English] The Oxford 3000 Most Important Words