FAMILIAR vs OLD: NOUN
- An attendant spirit often in animal form.
- A close friend.
- A member of one's family or household.
- A confidential officer employed in the service of the tribunal, especially in apprehending and imprisoning the accused.
- An attendant demon or evil spirit.
- An intimate; a companion.
- An officer of the Tribunal of the Inquisition who arrested persons accused or suspected. See inquisition.
- In the Roman Catholic Church, a member of the household of the pope or of a bishop, supported at his expense, and rendering him domestic, though not menial service. The familiar must live in the diocese of his superior.
- A familiar spirit; a demon or evil spirit supposed to attend at call. See familiar spirit, under I.
- A familiar friend; an intimate; a close companion; one long acquainted; one accustomed to another by free, unreserved converse.
- A person who frequents a place.
- One who performs domestic service in the household of a high official.
- An attendant spirit, often taking animal form.
- A close friend or associate.
- A person who is frequently in the company of another
- A person attached to the household of a high official (as a pope or bishop) who renders service in return for support
- A spirit (usually in animal form) that acts as an assistant to a witch or wizard
- Former times; yore.
- Old people considered as a group. Used with the.
- An individual of a specified age.
- Past times (especially in the phrase `in days of old')
FAMILIAR vs OLD: ADJECTIVE
- (usually followed by `with') well informed about or knowing thoroughly
- Of or pertaining to a family; familial.
- Inappropriately intimate or friendly.
- Intimate or friendly.
- Acquainted.
- Known to one.
- A demon or evil spirit supposed to attend at call.
- Improperly acquainted; wrongly intimate.
- Well known; well understood; common; frequent.
- Characterized by, or exhibiting, the manner of an intimate friend; not formal; unconstrained; easy; accessible.
- Closely acquainted or intimate, as a friend or companion; well versed in, as any subject of study.
- Of or pertaining to a family; domestic.
- Domesticated; tame. Used of animals.
- Familial.
- Taking undue liberties; presumptuous.
- Natural and unstudied; informal.
- Of established friendship; intimate.
- Having fair knowledge; acquainted.
- Often encountered or seen: : common.
- Within normal everyday experience; common and ordinary; not strange
- Well known or easily recognized
- Having mutual interests or affections; of established friendship
- Used to express affection or familiarity.
- Used as an intensive.
- Having become simpler in form and of lower relief. Used of a landform.
- Having become slower in flow and less vigorous in action. Used of a river.
- Being the earlier or earliest of two or more related objects, stages, versions, or periods.
- Belonging to or being of an earlier time.
- Belonging to a remote or former period in history; ancient.
- Skilled or able through long experience; practiced.
- Known through long acquaintance; long familiar.
- Exhibiting the effects of time or long use; worn.
- Having lived or existed for a specified length of time.
- Having or exhibiting the wisdom of age; mature.
- Having or exhibiting the physical characteristics of age.
- Of or relating to a long life or to people who have had long lives.
- Made long ago; in existence for many years.
- Relatively advanced in age.
- Having lived or existed for a relatively long time; far advanced in years or life.
- Just preceding something else in time or order
- Old in experience
- Of a very early stage in development
- Of an earlier time
- Lacking originality or spontaneity; no longer new
- (used especially of persons) having lived for a relatively long time or attained a specific age; especially not young; often used as a combining form to indicate an age as specified as in `a week-old baby'
- Of long duration; not new
FAMILIAR vs OLD: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Of established friendship
- Not strange
- Common and ordinary
- Synonyms Close, intimate, amicable, fraternal, near.
- Well known from frequent observation, use, etc.; well understood.
- Having an intimate knowledge; well knowing; well acquainted; well versed (in a subject of study): as, he is familiar with the works of Horace.
- Characterized by ease or absence of stiffness or pedantry; unconstrained.
- Having a friendly aspect or manner; exhibiting the manner of an intimate friend; affable; not formal or distant; especially, using undue familiarity; intrusive; forward.
- Having, or springing from, intimate and friendly social relations; closely intimate: as, a familiar friend; familiar companionship; to be on familiar terms with one.
- Pertaining to a family; domestic.
- (used informally especially for emphasis)
- Not new
- Of long duration
- Excellent
- Belonging to some prior time
- Skilled through long experience
- (used for emphasis) very familiar
- Past times
- A man having habits or opinions considered peculiar to old women.
- A full-grown male kangaroo.
- In mining, ancient workings: a term used in Cornwall.
- The form of black letter used by English printers of the sixteenth century.
- The mass of land comprising Europe, Asia, and Africa, in contradistinction to the new continent, consisting of North and South America.
- Great; high: an intensive now used only when preceded by another adjective also of intensive force: as, a fine old row; a high old time.
- Old-fashioned; of a former time; hence, antiquated: as, an old fogy.
- Long known; familiar; hence, an epithet of affection or cordiality: as, an old friend; dear old fellow; old boy.
- Former; past; passed away; disused; contrasted with or replaced by something new as a substitute; subsisting before something else: as, he built a new house on the site of the old one; the old régime; a gentleman of the old school; he is at his old tricks again.
- Early; pertaining to or characteristic of the earlier or earliest of two or more periods of time or stages of development: as, Old English; the Old Red Sandstone.
- Ancient; antique; not modern; former: as, the old inhabitants of Britain; the old Romans.
- Dating or reaching back to antiquity or to former ages; subsisting or known for a long time; long known to history.
- Well-worn; effete; worthless; trite; stale: expressing valuelessness, disrespect, or contempt: as, an old joke; sold for an old song.
- Hence — That has long existed or been in use, and is near, or has passed, the limit of its usefulness; enfeebled or deteriorated by age; worn out: as, old clothes.
- Not new, fresh, or recent; having been long made; having existed long: as, an old house; an old cabinet.
- Of (some specified) standing as regards continuance or lapse of time.
- Experienced; habituated: as, an old offender; old in vice or crime.
- Of long standing or continuance.
- Having the judgment or good sense of a person who has lived long and has gained experience; thoughtful; sober; sensible; wise: as, an old head on young shoulders.
- Of or pertaining to the latter part of life; peculiar to or characteristic of those who are, or that which is, well advanced in years.
- Of (a specified) age; noting the length of time or number of years that one has lived, or during which a thing or particular state of things has existed or continued; of the age of; aged: as, a child three months old; a house a century old.
- Having lived or existed a long time; full of years; far advanced in years or life: applied to human beings, lower animals, and plants: as, an old man; an old horse; an old tree.
- A pivoted attachment of a pump-rod to a bell-crank.
- In physical geography, far advanced in the geographical cycle: noting a stage in which land-forms have been reduced to small relief and in which all processes of erosion and transportation have become relatively inactive.
FAMILIAR vs OLD: RELATED WORDS
- Fellow, Forward, Associate, Informed, Old, Casual, Everyday, Usual, Informal, Intimate, Common, Close, Overfamiliar, Acquainted, Conversant
- Senile, Doddering, Aging, Venerable, Antiquated, Nonagenarian, Past, Antique, Rusty, Doddery, Hoary, Oldish, Sexagenarian, Octogenarian, Aged
FAMILIAR vs OLD: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Fellow, Forward, Associate, Informed, Old, Casual, Everyday, Usual, Informal, Intimate, Common, Close, Overfamiliar, Acquainted, Conversant
- Senile, Doddering, Aging, Venerable, Antiquated, Nonagenarian, Past, Antique, Rusty, Doddery, Hoary, Oldish, Sexagenarian, Octogenarian, Aged
FAMILIAR vs OLD: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Both groups should be familiar with those rights.
- Both parties should be familiar with state law.
- We have to become familiar with those patterns.
- All supervisors must be thoroughly familiar with firehazards.
- To make the unfamiliar familiar and the familiar unfamiliar by embedding differences within similarities and similarities within differences is good poetry.
- Those familiar with the legal system are more likely to sue, and physicians are very familiar with the system.
- You may be familiar with his family though you might not be familiar with him individually.
- Familiar names in the Collection tab of the Familiar System UI.
- The name is not familiar to me, but of his deeds I am familiar.
- It started to become familiar, almost too familiar.
- But even the old process was more complicated than the old Hawaiian and Aloha interisland system.
- Make a decorative wall hangings with old barn wood and other Old West Items like handcuffs or barbed wire.
- Did you ever wonder How old is too old for your kid to be in the stroller?
- Old Testament was valid up until Christ came, but at that time became old and outdated.
- Scoop up those old home movies or old photo albums and have them digitized.
- OLD BRADFORD BUZZARDS HOCKEY CLUB OLD CATHOLIC CHURCH OF AMERICA, OTTAWA DIOCESE INC.
- As Rabelais says, there are more old drunkards than old doctors.
- Give cash back offer to old user also, old user should get offer on regukar basis it will help you to encourage old user.
- Old Flame Tower, Old Hwacha, Oil for Old Flame Tower, and Old Hwacha Arrows from the Guild Shop Purchase list.
- OLD DURHAM ROAD PIONEER CEMETERY COMMITTEE OLD ERINDALE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION OLD FACTORY THEATRE, LONDON INC.
FAMILIAR vs OLD: QUESTIONS
- What is a familiar drug in Toxicologic Emergencies?
- Do dogs prefer familiar words or mismatched speech?
- How familiar are millennials with the Marine Corps?
- Are you familiar with brunnera or Siberian bugloss?
- What are the complications of poliposis adenomatosa familiar?
- Will Street Pianos Become a familiar sight everywhere?
- What makes the Familiar Familiar and the Strange Strange?
- What is the familiar setting for the stories with familiar settings?
- Who coined the phrase the familiar now seems not so familiar?
- How does the familiar Quick Guide rate familiar forms?
- How are revaluation accounts transferred to old partners?
- How old was Prettyman when she released twentytwentythree?
- How old is Christopher Bill from classical trombone?
- What are millennials already know about growing old?
- What language was Old English heavily influenced by?
- What is Twitter old information and search history?
- Who fulfilled all Old Testament messianic prophecy?
- When were the Old Testament apocrypha added to the Old Latin?
- How old was Tatum O'Neal when she was 10 years old?
- How old do you have to be to work at Old Country Buffet?