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A Writer's Dictionary:

fastest Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with F » farting ... fathom line » fastest


fast1
adj faster, fastest
    1. Moving, or able to move, quickly.
      Thesaurus: rapid, swift, fleet, quick, speedy, accelerated, hasty, winged, like a bat out of hell (slang), like a house on fire (slang); Antonym: slow, sluggish.
    2. Taking a relatively short time.
    3. Said of a clock, etc: showing a time in advance of the correct time.
    4. Allowing or intended for rapid movement.
      Example: the fast lane
    5. Said of a photographic film: requiring only brief exposure.
    6. colloq
      Tending to make sexual advances on rather brief acquaintance.
      Thesaurus: promiscuous, loose, whorish, wanton, wild; licentious, profligate, immoral; Antonym: chaste.
    7. Firmly fixed or caught; steadfast.
      Thesaurus: firm, adherent, attached, stuck, immovable, secure, steadfast.
    8. Said of friends: firm; close.
    9. Said of fabric colours: not liable to run or fade.
      Thesaurus: permanent, colour-fast, durable, lasting, washable, indelible, waterproof, vat-dyed.
adverb
    1. Quickly; rapidly.
      Thesaurus: rapidly, speedily, quickly, swiftly, hurriedly, hastily, apace, posthaste, lickety-split (slang), like a shot, like a flash, presto; Antonym: slow.
    2. In quick succession.
      Example: coming thick and fast
    3. Firmly; tight
      Example: The glue held fast.
      Thesaurus: securely, firmly, tightly, fixedly; Antonym: loosely.
    4. Deeply; thoroughly.
      Example: fast asleep
Derivative: fastish
adj
    Idiom: fast and furious
      Fast and lively; frenzied or frantic in pace.
    Idiom: live life in the fast lane
      colloq
      To have a lifestyle full of high excitement, expensive enjoyment and glamour.
    Idiom: play fast and loose
      To behave irresponsibly or unreliably.
        Thesaurus: behave recklessly, run wild, be careless, misbehave.
    Idiom: pull a fast one
      colloq
      To cheat or deceive.
    Etymology: Anglo-Saxon fæst fixed or firm.



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