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  1. Dictionary
    pure
    /pjʊə/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of PURE is unmixed with any other matter. How to use pure in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Pure.

  3. not mixed with anything else: a pure cotton shirt. pure orange juice. pure English honey. a pure Arab horse. A pure colour is not mixed with any other colour: a swan's pure white plumage. A pure sound is clear and perfect: the pure vocal tones of the choirboy.

  4. Pure definition: free from anything of a different, inferior, or contaminating kind; free from extraneous matter. See examples of PURE used in a sentence.

  5. If you describe something such as a colour, a sound, or a type of light as pure, you mean that it is very clear and represents a perfect example of its type. ...flowers in a whole range of blues with the occasional pure white.

  6. The adjective pure describes something that's made of only one substance and is not mixed with anything else. For example, your favorite soft, warm winter scarf might be made from pure merino wool. Anything that's uncontaminated by extra, unnecessary, or unclean substances is pure.

  7. PURE definition: 1. A pure substance is not mixed with anything else: 2. used to emphasize that a feeling, quality…. Learn more.

  8. 1. a. Having a homogeneous or uniform composition; not mixed: pure oxygen. b. Free of dirt, pollutants, infectious agents, or other unwanted elements: pure water. c. Containing nothing inappropriate or extraneous: a pure style of piano playing. 2. Complete; utter: pure folly. 3. a.

  9. Definition of pure adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. Adjective. Adverb. Filter. adjective. purer, purest. Having a homogeneous or uniform composition; not mixed. Pure oxygen. American Heritage. Free from anything that taints, impairs, infects, etc.; clear. Pure water or air. Webster's New World. Free of dirt, pollutants, infectious agents, or other unwanted elements. Pure water. American Heritage.

  11. word origin. Middle English: from Old French pur ‘pure’, from Latin purus. pure culture. noun (Microbiology) a culture in which only one strain or clone is present Examples Here, Koch perfected the technique of growing pure cultures of germs using a mix of potatoes and gelatine.