Synonyms for simplified


Grammar : Adj
Spell : sim-pluh-fahy
Phonetic Transcription : ˈsɪm pləˌfaɪ


Définition of simplified

Origin :
  • 1650s, from French simplifier "to make simpler" (15c.), from Medieval Latin simplificare "to simplify," from Latin simplex "simple" (see simplex) + root of facere "to make" (see factitious). Meaning "to make easier to do" is from 1759. Related: Simplified; simplifying.
  • adj made easy
  • adj made simple
Example sentences :
  • Steinheil, of Munich, simplified it, and added an alarm in the form of a bell.
  • Extract from : « Heroes of the Telegraph » by J. Munro
  • But I had had a suggestion from my mother which simplified matters immensely.
  • Extract from : « The Stark Munro Letters » by J. Stark Munro
  • In their consternation the Spaniards had simplified his task by huddling their boats together.
  • Extract from : « Captain Blood » by Rafael Sabatini
  • She was simplified to the merely feminine as he was to the merely masculine.
  • Extract from : « The Web of the Golden Spider » by Frederick Orin Bartlett
  • The thorough bass of the dear master has simplified all that.
  • Extract from : « Diderot and the Encyclopdists » by John Morley
  • "That is it," said Merrihew, whose flights of rhetoric were most simplified.
  • Extract from : « The Lure of the Mask » by Harold MacGrath
  • It simplified matters,” he had said to himself, “a good deal.
  • Extract from : « The Way of All Flesh » by Samuel Butler
  • Chairs may be so simplified in form as to be possible for the amateur to construct.
  • Extract from : « Handwork in Wood » by William Noyes
  • Nejdanov also laughed, repeated "simplified," and began musing.
  • Extract from : « Virgin Soil » by Ivan S. Turgenev
  • With Mr. Wendover to go to, all the problems are simplified.
  • Extract from : « Robert Elsmere » by Mrs. Humphry Ward

Antonyms for simplified

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019