We found 1 definitions of strangest from 2 different sources.
Adjectivestrange, stranger, strangest |
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strange - being definitely out of the ordinary and unexpected; slightly odd or even a bit weird; "a strange exaltation that was indefinable"; "a strange fantastical mind"; "what a strange sense of humor she has" | ||
unusual | ||
familiar having mutual interests or affections; of established friendship; "on familiar terms"; "pretending she is on an intimate footing with those she slanders" | ||
antic, fantastical, grotesque, fantastic ludicrously odd; "Hamlet's assumed antic disposition"; "fantastic Halloween costumes"; "a grotesque reflection in the mirror" | ||
crazy intensely enthusiastic about or preoccupied with; "crazy about cars and racing"; "he is potty about her" | ||
rum, rummy, queer, curious, funny, peculiar, odd, singular eager to investigate and learn or learn more (sometimes about others' concerns); "a curious child is a teacher's delight"; "a trap door that made me curious"; "curious investigators"; "traffic was slowed by curious rubberneckers"; "curious about the neighbor's doings" | ||
eery, eerie inspiring a feeling of fear; strange and frightening; "an uncomfortable and eerie stillness in the woods"; "an eerie midnight howl" | ||
exotic strikingly strange or unusual; "an exotic hair style"; "protons, neutrons, electrons and all their exotic variants"; "the exotic landscape of a dead planet" | ||
freaky strange and somewhat frightening; "the whole experience was really freaky" | ||
gothic characterized by gloom and mystery and the grotesque; "gothic novels like `Frankenstein'" | ||
oddish somewhat strange | ||
other very unusual; different in character or quality from the normal or expected; "a strange, other dimension...where his powers seemed to fail"- Lance Morrow | ||
quaint strange in an interesting or pleasing way; "quaint dialect words"; "quaint streets of New Orleans, that most foreign of American cities" | ||
quaint strange in an interesting or pleasing way; "quaint dialect words"; "quaint streets of New Orleans, that most foreign of American cities" | ||
strange - not known before; "used many strange words"; "saw many strange faces in the crowd"; "don't let anyone unknown into the house" | ||
unknown | ||
unfamiliar not known or well known; "a name unfamiliar to most"; "be alert at night especially in unfamiliar surroundings" | ||
strange - relating to or originating in or characteristic of another place or part of the world; "foreign nations"; "a foreign accent"; "on business in a foreign city" | ||
foreign | ||
native belonging to one by birth; "my native land"; "one's native language" | ||
adventive not native and not fully established; locally or temporarily naturalized; "an adventive weed" | ||
alien, exotic being or from or characteristic of another place or part of the world; "alien customs"; "exotic plants in a greenhouse"; "exotic cuisine" | ||
nonnative of plants or animals originating in a part of the world other than where they are growing | ||
naturalized, established planted so as to give an effect of wild growth; "drifts of naturalized daffodils" | ||
foreign-born, nonnative of persons born in another area or country than that lived in; "our large nonnative population" | ||
imported used of especially merchandise brought from a foreign source; "imported wines" | ||
tramontane on or coming from the other side of the mountains (from the speaker); "the transmontane section of the state"; "tramontane winds" |