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Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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7 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
deep
/ˈdip/
(a.)深的;深切的,深厚的;深刻的;專心的;調子低沈的(ad.)深,遲
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
deep
/ˈdɪp/
形容詞
深
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Deep
,
adv.
To
a
great
depth
;
with
depth
;
far
down
;
profoundly
;
deeply
.
Deep
-versed
in
books
,
and
shallow
in
himself
.
--
Milton
.
Drink
deep
,
or
taste
not
the
Pierian
spring
.
--
Pope
.
Note:
☞
Deep
,
in
its
usual
adverbial
senses
,
is
often
prefixed
to
an
adjective
;
as
,
deep
-chested,
deep
-cut,
deep
-seated,
deep
-toned,
deep
-voiced,
“
deep
-uddered kine.”
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Deep
,
n.
1.
That
which
is
deep
,
especially
deep
water
,
as
the
sea
or
ocean
;
an
abyss
;
a
great
depth
.
Courage
from
the
deeps
of
knowledge
springs
.
--
Cowley
.
The
hollow
deep
of
hell
resounded
.
--
Milton
.
Blue
Neptune
storms
,
the
bellowing
deeps
resound
.
--
Pope
.
2.
That
which
is
profound
,
not
easily
fathomed
,
or
incomprehensible
;
a
moral
or
spiritual
depth
or
abyss
.
Thy
judgments
are
a
great
deep
.
--
Ps
.
xxxvi
. 6.
Deep of night
,
the
most
quiet
or
profound
part
of
night
;
dead
of
night
.
The
deep of night
is
crept
upon
our
talk
.
--
Shak
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Deep
a.
[
Compar.
Deeper
superl.
Deepest
]
1.
Extending
far
below
the
surface
;
of
great
perpendicular
dimension
(
measured
from
the
surface
downward
,
and
distinguished
from
high
,
which
is
measured
upward
);
far
to
the
bottom
;
having
a
certain
depth
;
as
,
a
deep
sea
.
The
water
where
the
brook
is
deep
.
--
Shak
.
2.
Extending
far
back
from
the
front
or
outer
part
;
of
great
horizontal
dimension
(
measured
backward
from
the
front
or
nearer
part
,
mouth
,
etc
.);
as
,
a
deep
cave
or
recess
or
wound
;
a
gallery
ten
seats
deep
;
a
company
of
soldiers
six
files
deep
.
Shadowing
squadrons
deep
.
--
Milton
.
Safely
in
harbor
Is
the
king's
ship
in
the
deep
nook
. --
Shak
.
3.
Low
in
situation
;
lying
far
below
the
general
surface
;
as
,
a
deep
valley
.
4.
Hard
to
penetrate
or
comprehend
;
profound
; --
opposed
to
shallow
or
superficial
;
intricate
;
mysterious
;
not
obvious
;
obscure
;
as
,
a
deep
subject
or
plot
.
Speculations
high
or
deep
.
--
Milton
.
A
question
deep
almost
as
the
mystery
of
life
.
--
De
Quincey
.
O
Lord
, . . .
thy
thoughts
are
very
deep
.
--
Ps
.
xcii
. 5.
5.
Of
penetrating
or
far-reaching
intellect
;
not
superficial
;
thoroughly
skilled
;
sagacious
;
cunning
.
Deep
clerks
she
dumbs
.
--
Shak
.
6.
Profound
;
thorough
;
complete
;
unmixed
;
intense
;
heavy
;
heartfelt
;
as
,
deep
distress
;
deep
melancholy
;
deep
horror
.
“
Deep
despair.”
--
Milton
.
“
Deep
silence.”
--
Milton
.
“
Deep
sleep.”
--
Gen
.
ii
. 21.
“
Deeper
darkness.”
--
Hoole
.
“Their
deep
poverty.”
--
2
Cor
.
viii
. 2.
An
attitude
of
deep
respect
.
--
Motley
.
7.
Strongly
colored
;
dark
;
intense
;
not
light
or
thin
;
as
,
deep
blue
or
crimson
.
8.
Of
low
tone
;
full-toned
;
not
high
or
sharp
;
grave
;
heavy
.
“The
deep
thunder.”
The
bass
of
heaven's
deep
organ
.
--
Milton
.
9.
Muddy
;
boggy
;
sandy
; --
said
of
roads
.
The
ways
in
that
vale
were
very
deep
.
--
Clarendon
.
A deep line of operations
Military
,
a
long
line
.
Deep mourning
Costume
,
mourning
complete
and
strongly
marked
,
the
garments
being
not
only
all
black
,
but
also
composed
of
lusterless
materials
and
of
such
fashion
as
is
identified
with
mourning
garments
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
deep
adj
1:
relatively
deep
or
strong
;
affecting
one
deeply
; "
a
deep
breath
"; "
a
deep
sigh
"; "
deep
concentration
"; "
deep
emotion
"; "
a
deep
trance
"; "
in
a
deep
sleep
" [
ant
:
shallow
]
2:
marked
by
depth
of
thinking
; "
deep
thoughts
"; "
a
deep
allegory
"
3:
having
great
spatial
extension
or
penetration
downward
or
inward
from
an
outer
surface
or
backward
or
laterally
or
outward
from
a
center
;
sometimes
used
in
combination
; "
a
deep
well
"; "
a
deep
dive
"; "
deep
water
"; "
a
deep
casserole
"; "
a
deep
gash
"; "
deep
massage
"; "
deep
pressure
receptors
in
muscles
"; "
deep
shelves
"; "
a
deep
closet
";
"
surrounded
by
a
deep
yard
"; "
hit
the
ball
to
deep
center
field
"; "
in
deep
space
"; "
waist-deep
" [
ant
:
shallow
]
4:
very
distant
in
time
or
space
; "
deep
in
the
past
"; "
deep
in
enemy
territory
"; "
deep
in
the
woods
"; "
a
deep
space
probe
"
5:
extreme
; "
in
deep
trouble
"; "
deep
happiness
"
6:
having
or
denoting
a
low
vocal
or
instrumental
range
; "
a
deep
voice
"; "
a
bass
voice
is
lower
than
a
baritone
voice
"; "
a
bass
clarinet
" [
syn
:
bass
]
7:
strong
;
intense
; "
deep
purple
"; "
a
rich
red
" [
syn
:
rich
]
8:
relatively
thick
from
top
to
bottom
; "
deep
carpets
"; "
deep
snow
"
9:
extending
relatively
far
inward
; "
a
deep
border
"
10: (
of
darkness
)
very
intense
; "
thick
night
"; "
thick
darkness
";
"
a
face
in
deep
shadow
"; "
deep
night
" [
syn
:
thick
]
11:
large
in
quantity
or
size
; "
deep
cuts
in
the
budget
"
12:
with
head
or
back
bent
low
; "
a
deep
bow
"
13:
of
an
obscure
nature
; "
the
new
insurance
policy
is
written
without
cryptic
or
mysterious
terms
"; "
a
deep
dark
secret
"; "
the
inscrutible
workings
of
Providence
"; "
in
its
mysterious
past
it
encompasses
all
the
dim
origins
of
life
"-
Rachel
Carson
; "
rituals
totally
mystifying
to
visitors
from
other
lands
" [
syn
:
cryptic
,
cryptical
,
inscrutable
,
mysterious
,
mystifying
]
14:
difficult
to
penetrate
;
incomprehensible
to
one
of
ordinary
understanding
or
knowledge
; "
the
professor's
lectures
were
so
abstruse
that
students
tended
to
avoid
them
"; "
a
deep
metaphysical
theory
"; "
some
recondite
problem
in
historiography
" [
syn
:
abstruse
,
recondite
]
15:
exhibiting
great
cunning
usually
with
secrecy
; "
deep
political
machinations
"; "
a
deep
plot
"
n
1:
the
central
and
most
intense
or
profound
part
; "
in
the
deep
of
night
"; "
in
the
deep
of
winter
"
2:
a
long
steep-sided
depression
in
the
ocean
floor
[
syn
:
trench
,
oceanic abyss
]
3:
literary
term
for
an
ocean
; "
denizens
of
the
deep
"
adv
1:
to
a
great
depth
; "
dived
deeply
"; "
dug
deep
" [
syn
:
deeply
]
2:
to
an
advanced
time
; "
deep
into
the
night
"; "
talked
late
into
the
evening
" [
syn
:
late
]
3:
to
far
into
space
; "
penetrated
deep
into
enemy
territory
";
"
went
deep
into
the
woods
";
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Deep
used
to
denote
(1)
the
grave
or
the
abyss
(
Rom
. 10:7;
Luke
8:31); (2)
the
deepest
part
of
the
sea
(
Ps
. 69:15); (3)
the
chaos
mentioned
in
Gen
. 1:2; (4)
the
bottomless
pit
,
hell
(
Rev
.
9:1, 2; 11:7; 20:13).
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