LIBERALS vs BROAD: NOUN
- Plural form of liberal.
- A person who favors a political philosophy of progress and reform and the protection of civil liberties
- A person who favors an economic theory of laissez-faire and self-regulating markets
- Slang term for a woman
- A wide flat part, as of one's hand.
- A woman or girl.
- A woman, especially one who is sexually promiscuous; -- usually considered offensive.
- A lathe tool for turning down the insides and bottoms of cylinders.
- The spread of a river into a sheet of water; a flooded fen.
- A shallow, fenny lake formed by the expansion of a river over adjacent flat land covered more or less with a reedy growth; a flooded fen, or lake in a fen: as, the Norfolk broads.
- In mech., a tool used for turning down the insides and bottoms of cylinders in the lathe.
- An English coin first issued in 1619 by James I., and worth at the time 20s. The coin was also issued subsequently. Also called laurel and broad-piece.
- The broad part of anything.
LIBERALS vs BROAD: ADJECTIVE
- Tolerant of change; not bound by authoritarianism, orthodoxy, or tradition
- Showing or characterized by broad-mindedness
- Not literal
- Given or giving freely
- Having political or social views favoring reform and progress
- Very large in expanse or scope
- Showing or characterized by broad-mindedness
- Pronounced with the tongue placed low and flat and with the oral cavity wide open, like the a in father.
- Strikingly regional or dialectal.
- Vulgar; ribald.
- Plain and clear; obvious.
- Relating to or covering the main facts or the essential points.
- Not detailed or specific
- Covering a wide scope; general.
- Full; open.
- Having a certain width from side to side.
- Large in expanse; spacious.
- Wide in extent from side to side.
- Lacking subtlety; obvious
- Broad in scope or content
- Having great (or a certain) extent from one side to the other
- Liberal; tolerant.
- Wide; extend in breadth, or from side to side; -- opposed to narrow.
- Extending far and wide; extensive; vast.
- Extended, in the sense of diffused; open; clear; full.
- (of speech) heavily and noticeably regional
- Comprehensive; liberal; enlarged.
- Free; unrestrained; unconfined.
- Characterized by breadth. See Breadth.
- Cross; coarse; indelicate.
- Strongly marked.
- See under Acre.
- Originally a pheon. See Pheon, and Broad arrow under Arrow.
- Fig.: Having a large measure of any thing or quality; not limited; not restrained; -- applied to any subject, and retaining the literal idea more or less clearly, the precise meaning depending largely on the substantive.
LIBERALS vs BROAD: ADVERB
- N/A
- Fully; completely.
LIBERALS vs BROAD: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- Plain; evident.
- Characterized by a full, strong utterance; coarsely vigorous; not weak or slender in sound: as, broad Scotch; broad Doric; a broad vowel, such as ä or â or ō.
- Unrestrained by fear or caution; bold; unreserved.
- Unrestrained by considerations of decency; indelicate; indecent.
- Unrestrained by a sense of propriety or fitness; unpolished; loutish.
- Unconfined; free; unrestrained.
- Widely diffused; open; full: as, in broad sunshine; broad daylight.
- In the fine arts, characterized by breadth: as, a picture remarkable for the broad treatment of its subject. See breadth, 3.
- Specifically Inclined to the Broad Church, or to the views held by the Broad-Church party of the Church of England. See Episcopal.
- Figuratively, not limited or narrow; liberal; comprehensive; enlarged: as, a man of broad views.
- Large superficially; extensive; vast: as, the broad expanse of ocean.
- Wide; having great breadth, as distinguished from length and thickness; used absolutely, having much width or breadth; not narrow: as, a strip no broader than one's hand; a broad river or street.
- To make broad; spread.
- Broadly; fully.
- Widely; copiously; abundantly.
- Broadly; openly; plainly.
- Large in measure or degree; not small or slight; ample; consummate.
- Lacking subtlety
- Being at a peak or culminating point
- Obvious
LIBERALS vs BROAD: RELATED WORDS
- Inexact, Bountiful, Openhanded, Bighearted, Broad, Loose, Left, Welfare, Generous, Socialized, Tolerant, Neoliberal, Welfarist, Reformist, Progressive
- Full, Blanket, Fanlike, Nationwide, General, Panoptic, Heavy, Unspecific, Clear, Deep, Sweeping, Encompassing, Large, Comprehensive, Wide
LIBERALS vs BROAD: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Inexact, Bountiful, Openhanded, Bighearted, Broad, Loose, Left, Welfare, Generous, Socialized, Tolerant, Neoliberal, Welfarist, Reformist, Progressive
- Full, Blanket, Fanlike, Nationwide, General, Panoptic, Heavy, Unspecific, Clear, Deep, Sweeping, Encompassing, Large, Comprehensive, Wide
LIBERALS vs BROAD: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The NDP is criticizing and liberals saying they bought a pipeline and that undercuts anything the Liberals are trying to do on climate change.
- BC Liberals are more like the federal Conservatives than the federal Liberals, for example.
- Christianity, and no one is more judged and condemned by them than Liberals, whether political or Christian Liberals.
- Most liberals would be horrified if conservatives said to Muslims what liberals say to conservative Christians without hesitation.
- By and large, liberals do not beget liberals, they beget agnostics.
- When will the Liberals stop giving Liberals an edge when it comes to judicial appointments?
- Liberals, and most of its Ontario and Atlantic supporters bolted for the Liberals.
- If news and opinion editors seem biased against liberals, one reason is simply that liberals are not delivering the goods.
- We liberals will always be howling, while Obama has generally given the back of his hand to liberals.
- Liberals, or at least mainstream liberals, have been ambivalent about Occupy Wall Street.
- These fall into a number of broad categories.
- International humanitarian law provides broad protection for children.
- Delaware corporation should be clear and sufficiently broad.
- The broad shouldered and heavily muscled man asked.
- It reviews broad concepts associated with green cities.
- Of course my remarks are a broad generalization.
- Though the rules of discovery are very broad, this does not mean that the other side can make burdensome or overly broad requests.
- Learn more about the broad match in our broad match guide.
- Example: The agency routinely receives broad requests for communications relating to numerous broad topics.
- Broad dispositions, broad aspirations: the intersection of personality traits and major life goals.
LIBERALS vs BROAD: QUESTIONS
- Why do many Liberals support constitutionalism and consent?
- Are Libertarians less moral than liberals and conservatives?
- Are Conservatives and Liberals prejudiced against feminists?
- Why are Conservatives more successful than liberals?
- What unites Conservatives with liberals and socialists?
- What do liberals believe about international relations?
- How many states do Conservatives outnumber liberals?
- What do liberals believe about voluntary association?
- Are progressive social liberals Protectionists and nativists?
- Are Liberals more compassionate than conservatives?
- Is broad corporate responsibility affected by externality?
- Do CUS nanomaterials have broad absorption spectrum?
- Should Fisheries officers have broad search powers?
- What is the broad ecosystem inventory classification?
- Why is chloramphenicol a broad spectrum antibiotic?
- Does broad-based education serve multiple purposes?
- What is kennelsol broad spectrum germicidal cleaner?
- Should broad complex tachycardias be considered separately?
- What was Broad Hinton's share of the Broad Town Trust 1974?
- What are some bootlegs that feature the original broad broad?