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Crossword clues for unfamiliar

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
unfamiliar
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
totally
▪ I was thrilled at the prospect ahead of me but diffident and embarrassed at joining a community so totally unfamiliar.
▪ They were unmarked, and totally unfamiliar.
▪ But what was totally unfamiliar was the athleticism and poised stage presence she had achieved in such a short time.
▪ Now she was praying that her idea was wrong, that she would find herself looking at some one totally unfamiliar.
■ NOUN
environment
▪ Living in an unfamiliar environment, surrounded by strangers, people felt uneasy, lost, and disoriented.
▪ Stress, produced by three bursts of noise when the monkeys were placed in an unfamiliar environment, compounded the problems.
place
▪ She had never liked being in the dark, especially being in unfamiliar places in the dark.
▪ The really valuable experience comes from landing in many different, unfamiliar places, whether they are fields or large aerodromes.
▪ If the horse is taken to a show, or event, or some other unfamiliar place, its apprehension automatically increases.
surroundings
▪ It took D'Arcy a few seconds to connect the familiar face in the unfamiliar surroundings.
▪ Laboratory experiments have proven that unfamiliar surroundings and a change in daily schedule can lead to sleep problems.
▪ If people are already ill at ease in unfamiliar surroundings the order of service becomes another pressure.
▪ It's not only riding skills that count when considering a holiday, but the ability to cope in unfamiliar surroundings.
▪ Players will tend to perform better when they are among friends than when they are placed in unfamiliar surroundings.
▪ Shooting video in unfamiliar surroundings raises potential hazards.
▪ Working as a team, and working in unfamiliar surroundings are important.
territory
▪ This was their one mistake, this entering on unfamiliar territory - his territory.
▪ Every large event, personal or shared, takes us into unfamiliar territory.
word
▪ Familiar terms appear to offer children a specific location for the contrasts carried by an unfamiliar word.
▪ When a child encounters an unfamiliar word, there are several helpful ways to intervene.
▪ If you come across an unfamiliar word or phrase, find its source.
▪ However well and clearly you speak, you will not be understood if you use unfamiliar words.
▪ They uttered unfamiliar words, exchanging for their long-held tenderness their new-found passion.
▪ As predicted, children also assume, when they hear unfamiliar words, that these label unfamiliar categories.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ an unfamiliar name
▪ Driving on the left-hand side of the road was unfamiliar and a little frightening.
▪ His name may be unfamiliar to Western audiences.
▪ It took Steven some time to get used to his unfamiliar surroundings.
▪ She needs your support even more now that she's in an unfamiliar environment.
▪ She noticed an unfamiliar truck parked across the street.
▪ She spoke with an unfamiliar accent.
▪ Some of these expressions may be unfamiliar to your students.
▪ The army uses satellites to help soldiers navigate unfamiliar terrain.
▪ The song is in Russian, a language unfamiliar to many singers.
▪ The voice on the phone sounded unfamiliar.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ I saw saxifrages and wild thyme and others that were unfamiliar to me.
▪ I simply notice, one day after clamming, an irritating deposit of grit beneath ten unfamiliar growths on my hands.
▪ Scientists and policy makers face unfamiliar challenges in addressing these broader contextual issues in population health.
▪ She may have waked and listened to the breathing beside her, and been shaken by unfamiliar emotions and tender resolves.
▪ Some of the waders were unfamiliar to me.
▪ The resulting look may not have been pretty on the final day, but neither was it unfamiliar.
▪ They are unfamiliar with its routine.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
unfamiliar

1590s, from un- (1) "not" + familiar (adj.). Related: Unfamiliarly; unfamiliarity.

Wiktionary
unfamiliar

a. strange, not familiar. n. An unfamiliar person; a stranger.

WordNet
unfamiliar

adj. not known or well known; "a name unfamiliar to most"; "be alert at night especially in unfamiliar surroundings" [ant: familiar]

Usage examples of "unfamiliar".

The language was unfamiliar, yet so liquid, so graceful in the ear that it seemed Alec could almost grasp it-and that if he did it would reveal a depth of meaning his own language could never achieve.

An unmistakeable yearning flooded Aurora, along with an unfamiliar hunger she could only call desire.

One afternoon I came out of the bakery and discovered someone unfamiliar sitting at Mrs.

The beeper went off while I was still a few blocks away from my apartment, and when I glanced down and noted that the number on the lighted display was unfamiliar, I decided to wait until I got upstairs to return the call.

There, in that moribund, ancient town, wrapped in its siesta, flagellated with heat, deserted, ignored, baking in a noon-day silence, these two strange men, the one a poet by nature, the other by training, both out of tune with their world, dreamers, introspective, morbid, lost and unfamiliar at that end-of-the-century time, searching for a sign, groping and baffled amidst the perplexing obscurity of the Delusion, sat over empty wine glasses, silent with the pervading silence that surrounded them, hearing only the cooing of doves and the drone of bees, the quiet so profound, that at length they could plainly distinguish at intervals the puffing and coughing of a locomotive switching cars in the station yard of Bonneville.

The badge embroidered over his left breast was quite unfamiliar to Javan, as was the unusual cincture of braided red and gold knotted over the black cassock.

Man-made, surely, although its characters were unfamiliar save in their faint hinting at cuneiform shapes.

Though unfamiliar with the perils of cyanogen gas, Chokoloskee residents had little doubt that the comet portended the arrival of Judgment Day upon the earth in the form of storms, floods, droughts, and plagues and other natural afflictions, among which not a few would be laid at the door of Mr.

Evidently these two young men were unfamiliar with the dueling ceremonies, though they were not unfamiliar with the sword.

However, their outlines have an unfamiliar aspect, primarily because shallow epicontinental seas still covered some areas, while others, now lying underwater, Were then dry land.

Pure enough to breathe, but slightly tainted with an unfamiliar smell, she thought as she stepped out of the Fiver and onto the thick grassoid surface covering.

It was hard for Joseph to make out what they were saying, for, although like all Masters he was fluent in Folkish as well as the Master tongue and the Indigene language also, the northern dialect these people used was unfamiliar to him and when they spoke rapidly and more than one was speaking at once, as they were doing now, he quickly lost the thread of their words.

They saw nothing but Jeremiah Freel diving into the elevator, and two large, unfamiliar men strewing stun grenades up and down the length of the hallway.

And now, excited by the near prospect of comparative rest and freedom, I exulted in the idea of exchanging the red--lined roads and yellow mullock heaps, the iron or wooden shanties, the sombre shadeless forest, amid which I had sojourned so long, for the cool streets, the lofty freestone walls, the massed flower thickets, and the unfamiliar luxuries of the City of the Sea.

Going to bed with strange women was nothing unfamiliar for Carpenter, but Jeanne Gabel was not exactly strange to him, and yet she was.