Synonym: dim, faint, hazy, indefinite, indistinct, misty, obscure, shadowy, unclear. Antonym: clear, distinct. Similar words: league, colleague, vagrant, guest, fatigue, dialogue, intrigued. Meaning: [veɪg] adj. 1. not clearly understood or expressed 2. not precisely limited, determined, or distinguished 3. lacking clarity or distinctness.
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151. Now I come to think of it, she was rather vague regarding his exact position with the company.
152. Vague notions about the tourist benefits of the monarchy might become more fully articulated, in order to combat contrary republican notions.
153. And so on the City College campus a vague and indistinctly demarcated intellectual struggle assumed, amazingly, the form of melodrama.
154. Her talk wasn't vague approbation or disapproval, some big show of emotion.
155. It's a vague enough notion, that something unauthorized was then loaded under cover of the dark.
156. Children could go on for ever finding out information about dinosaurs and be no nearer satisfying this vague purpose.
157. At least the first time, she'd only a vague notion of what might lie ahead.
158. The less skilled negotiator prefers to leave things vague and ambiguous fearing that explicitness will jeopardize any agreement.
159. He praised the virtues of volunteerism and made vague mention of garbage men he knows who collect trash as volunteers.
160. As the students are talking, a wave of soft, vague light, of sleepy distraction, passes over Primo.
161. He finds himself evaluated by the correspondingly vague notion of competence.
162. But they are deliberately vague because there are great problems with the dream of a tax form that fits on to a postcard.
163. They will also be ideal in fog, twilight and dull weather, enhancing vague details and extending the range of visibility.
164. Behind them, a vague wall of audience, the faces barely discernible in bright, damp air.
165. It was only a dim personification: something vague and immense which with its motion brought about change and therefore was alive.
166. Members of informal groups in work organizations usually have vague group objectives, and are less cohesive and behave erratically.
167. This very often happens in planning because some departments makes them vague in comparison.
168. Isabel listened to the sound of Chalon's steady hoofbeats, finding a vague comfort in the monotony of the noise.
169. By keeping war aims vague, he prevented bickering among the Allies.
170. She made a vague gesture in the direction of the refrigerator.
171. Karlin relates the oppressive anti-Semitism his forebears endured in a vague, almost elliptical style with dips into the stream of consciousness.
172. It still burned with a harsh, blinding glare and through it she could see vague shapes[Sentence dictionary], presumably the others.
173. What we have are some rather vague hints in later sources.
174. What director Michael Winterbottom excels at, instead, is creating an atmosphere of vague religious resonance.
175. Instead, I was a pliable, compliant inhabitant of a world of vague feelings and limited comprehension.
176. North read it out at his trial four years later as evidence of approval, but it was all delightfully vague.
177. Postoperatively, the patient complained of vague abdominal discomfort and the drain was removed after two days.
178. So, as well as being probably infinite in length, the list of conditional observation statements was probably rather vague in content.
179. The fact that superstition, occultism, and vague forms of religious paganism persist into modernity is nothing to shout about.
180. If Luke is vague on the subject, Matthew and Mark are both quite explicit.