• Adjective

    having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full
    a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
    finished; ended; concluded
    a complete orbit.
    having all the required or customary characteristics, skills, or the like; consummate; perfect in kind or quality
    a complete scholar.
    thorough; entire; total; undivided, uncompromised, or unmodified
    a complete victory; a complete mess.
    Grammar . having all modifying or complementary elements included
    The complete subject of The dappled pony gazed over the fence is The dappled pony. Compare simple def. 20
    Also, completed. Football . (of a forward pass) caught by a receiver.
    Logic . (of a set of axioms) such that every true proposition able to be formulated in terms of the basic ideas of a given system is deducible from the set. Compare incomplete ( def. 4b ) .
    Engineering . noting a determinate truss having the least number of members required to connect the panel points so as to form a system of triangles. Compare incomplete ( def. 3 ) , redundant ( def. 5c ) .
    (of persons) accomplished; skilled; expert.
    Mathematics .
    of or pertaining to an algebraic system, as a field with an order relation defined on it, in which every set of elements of the system has a least upper bound.
    of or pertaining to a set in which every fundamental sequence converges to an element of the set. Compare fundamental sequence .
    (of a lattice) having the property that every subset has a least upper bound and a greatest lower bound.

    Verb (used with object)

    to make whole or entire
    I need three more words to complete the puzzle.
    to bring to an end; finish
    Has he completed his new novel yet?
    to consummate.
    Football . to execute (a forward pass) successfully
    He completed 17 passes in 33 attempts.

    tác giả


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