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impure
[ im-pyoor ]
adjective
- not pure; mixed with extraneous matter, especially of an inferior or contaminating nature:
impure water and air.
- modified by admixture, as color.
- mixed or combined with something else:
an impure style of architecture.
- regarded by a religion as unclean, as animals or things.
- not morally pure or proper; unchaste or obscene:
impure thoughts.
Synonyms: licentious, improper, vulgar, coarse
- marked by foreign and unsuitable or objectionable elements or characteristics, as a style of art or of literary expression.
impure
/ ɪmˈpjʊə /
adjective
- not pure; combined with something else; tainted or sullied
- in certain religions
- (of persons) ritually unclean and as such debarred from certain religious ceremonies
- (of foodstuffs, vessels, etc) debarred from certain religious uses
- (of a colour) mixed with another colour or with black or white
- of more than one origin or style, as of architecture or other design
Derived Forms
- imˈpureness, noun
- imˈpurely, adverb
Other Words From
- im·purely adverb
- im·pureness noun
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
But instead of a barrier to keep out the impure, they are means of removing it, of excreting all that “poisons the blood,” to use Trump’s Hitlerian metaphor.
In this case, the presumption is that most voters share Trump's repulsion for "impure" people whose gender or race falls outside rigid boundaries he has defined for them.
The Nazi dictator spoke of impure Jewish blood “poisoning” Aryan German blood to dehumanize Jews and justify the systemic murder of millions during the Holocaust.
Other inaccurate perceptions included the idea that menstruating people emitted a toxin and could cause disease, that the blood was impure, and even that the blood could wipe out agricultural crops.
Surprisingly, they found that impure ice was much less sticky than ice made from pure water under certain conditions.
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