Antonym: plural. Similar words: singularly, triangular, regular, irregular, regularly, regularity, at regular intervals, engulf. Meaning: ['sɪŋgjələ(r) /-jʊl-] n. the form of a word that is used to denote a singleton. adj. 1. unusual or striking 2. beyond or deviating from the usual or expected 3. being a single and separate person or thing 4. composed of one member, set, or kind 5. grammatical number category referring to a single item or unit 6. the single one of its kind.
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31. Where he got that singular notion I just can't think.
32. The word 'teeth' is plural - in the singular it's 'tooth'.
33. Although infinite in variety, it was singular in appeal.
34. No explanation or suggestions accompanied this rather singular statement.
35. The falsity of universal statements can be deduced from suitable singular statements.
36. It is an honest, remarkable and singular thing in itself.
37. What this condition of the theatre indicates is that the establishing of a singular text for many plays is extremely difficult.
38. In addition, contempt has the singular advantage of providing moments of light relief within what is essentially a serious framework.
39. Strange Singulars Sometimes the plural or singular form of a noun is so rarely used that people forget what it is.
40. The earth saw its first flowering plants and then a singular explosion of them as the barren plains burst into bloom.
41. The lake alone, focus of a new film starring Ted Danson, has a singular mystique.
42. The mountain Nui Ba Den was a singular feature in my area of operation and a good example of hazardous terrain.
43. With the singular exception of property stocks, all sectors benefited from heavy demand, almost all leading shares sporting double-figure gains.
44. Here, as also in pages to come[sentencedict.com], we see the most singular feature of the affluent society taking form.
45. This distinction between singular and plural, properly considered, raises a further substantial complication.
46. Maud talked with a mixture of pedantry and horse sense that impressed him as singular and forcible.
47. These languages have a dual form in addition to singular and plural forms.
48. He said they tend to be more eloquent and more creative because their experiences are mostly singular.
49. Autogena is not the first artist to be attracted by their singular form.
50. A singular boundary point q can then be classified according to this scheme.
51. He was a superb pilot, with a singular, agile mind.
52. Congress, at least publicly, exhibited a singular lack of understanding of the causes and nature of the Seminole War.
53. And damn him for daring to pry into my affairs and for subtly mocking my singular state!
54. But after escaping to join another gang, Devi carried out a singular form of retribution.
55. Her appearance in Liverpool was a singular coup for the Festival of Comedy and must rank as the premiere attraction.
56. For singular reasons he was much in demand these days, often visited[Sentencedict.com ], often consulted and confessed to.
57. A singular individual talent in a man's game and a distinctive, willful group of women in a team sport.
58. A high number of singular military displays more than took up the slack, riding a post- Desert Storm popularity wave.
59. But the corpus is a singular specimen, whose like is seldom seen on screen.
60. Only a life history approach can allow us to follow these threads to a fuller understanding of each person's singular present.
More similar words: singularly, triangular, regular, irregular, regularly, regularity, at regular intervals, engulf, engulfed, regulate, coagulate, regulator, regulatory, regulation, sinking feeling, secular, popular, jocular, globular, unpopular, molecular, binocular, avuncular, particular, tabula rasa, vocabulary, vernacular, popularity, crepuscular, spectacular.