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Dear   /dɪr/   Listen
Dear

adjective
(compar. dearer; superl. dearest)
1.
Dearly loved.  Synonyms: beloved, darling.
2.
With or in a close or intimate relationship.  Synonyms: good, near.  "My sisters and brothers are near and dear"
3.
Earnest.  Synonyms: devout, earnest, heartfelt.  "Devout wishes for their success" , "Heartfelt condolences"
4.
Having a high price.  Synonyms: costly, high-priced, pricey, pricy.  "High-priced merchandise" , "Much too dear for my pocketbook" , "A pricey restaurant"
noun
1.
A beloved person; used as terms of endearment.  Synonyms: beloved, dearest, honey, love.
2.
A sweet innocent mild-mannered person (especially a child).  Synonym: lamb.
adverb
1.
With affection.  Synonyms: affectionately, dearly.  "He treats her affectionately"
2.
At a great cost.  Synonym: dearly.  "This cost him dear"



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"Dear" Quotes from Famous Books



... scrutinize the composition of his character,—we cannot take that large, free, genial nature to pieces, and weigh this and measure that, and sum up and pronounce; we are too near as yet to him, and to his loss, he is too dear to us to be so handled. "His death," to use the pathetic words of Hartley Coleridge, "is a recent sorrow; his image still lives in eyes that weep for him." The prevailing feeling is,—He is gone—"abiit ad plures—he has gone over to ...
— Spare Hours • John Brown

... or no liberty; while the Portuguese have so much freedom in this said city, as has been and is seen, as I have already stated. Consequently, what our people have brought from that city has always been too dear, by reason of the aforesaid profit which the said Portuguese have made of it. They, not content with this, have (as is well known also), whenever opportunity has arisen to send any ship of his Majesty from this city to bring back at his royal account military supplies for the provision ...
— The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Volume XXV, 1635-36 • Various

... How shameless is our prayer! Not on hard turf To stretch our dying limbs; nor seek in vain, When parts the soul, a hand to close our eyes; Not with the helmet strike the stony clod: (19) Rather to feel the dear one's last embrace, And gain a humble but a separate tomb. Let nature end old age. And dost thou think We only know not what degree of crime Will fetch the highest price? What thou canst dare These years have ...
— Pharsalia; Dramatic Episodes of the Civil Wars • Lucan

... Ethel. "My dear mother, you never saw such ices. Only two kinds. And one a common little strawberry shop ice, in a ...
— The Garden Party • Katherine Mansfield

... recollection of Constance Landbrooke still floated like a faded perfume. His love for Conny had been a very delicate affair, for she was a very sweet little creature. She was like one of Lawrence's creations, with all the dainty feminine graces so dear to that painter of furbelows and laces and velvets, of lustrous eyes and pouting lips, a very re-incarnation of the little Countess of Shaftesbury. Lively, chattering, never still, lavish of infantile diminutives and silvery ...
— The Child of Pleasure • Gabriele D'Annunzio


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