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  1. Dictionary
    fresh
    /frɛʃ/

    adjective

    adverb

    • 1. newly; recently: "fresh-baked bread"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. recently made, done, arrived, etc., and especially not yet changed by time: There was a fresh fall of snow during the night. There's nothing better than fresh bread, straight from the oven. The house, with its fresh coat of paint, looked beautiful in the sunshine.

  3. The meaning of FRESH is having its original qualities unimpaired. How to use fresh in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Fresh.

  4. adjective. , fresh·er, fresh·est. newly made or obtained: fresh footprints. Synonyms: energetic, recent. Antonyms: old. recently arrived; just come: fresh from school. new; not previously known, met with, etc.; novel: to uncover fresh facts; to seek fresh experiences. additional or further: fresh supplies. not salty, as water.

  5. smelling clean or feeling pleasantly cool: a fresh breeze. a fresh smell. fresh air. B1. air outside buildings that is clean and cool: Let's go outside and get some fresh air. fresh water. water from lakes, rivers, etc that has no salt in it.

  6. 22 meanings: 1. not stale or deteriorated; newly made, harvested, etc 2. newly acquired, created, found, etc 3. novel; original.... Click for more definitions.

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

  8. Fresh describes things that are new or energetic, like fresh bread from the oven and fresh music from a recording artist. Moldy bread and grandpa's polkas? Not so fresh.

  9. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Nature fresh1 /freʃ/ S2 W2 adjective 1 new adding to or replacing something I’ll just make some fresh coffee. The report provides fresh evidence about the way the business was run.

  10. The sense of ‘newly made, not faded, or worn’ developed in the Middle Ages. Fresh meaning ‘cheeky’ or ‘impudent’ appeared in the 19th century, and may have been influenced by German frech ‘saucy’. A desire for new areas of activity may be expressed as wanting fresh fields and pastures new.

  11. fresh. (frĕsh) adj. fresh·er, fresh·est. 1. a. New to one's experience; not encountered before: fresh evidence. b. Unusual or different: a fresh approach on the problem. See Synonyms at new. 2. a. Recently made, produced, or harvested; not stale or spoiled: fresh bread. b. Not preserved, as by canning, smoking, or freezing: fresh vegetables. 3.