Clean vs. Pure

By Jaxson

  • Clean (adjective)

    Free of dirt or impurities or protruberances.

  • Clean (adjective)

    Not dirty.

    “Are these dishes clean?”

    “Your room is finally clean!”

  • Clean (adjective)

    In an unmarked condition.

    “Put a clean sheet of paper into the printer.”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Allowing an uninterrupted flow over surfaces, without protrusions such as racks or landing gear.

  • Clean (adjective)

    Empty.

    “The cargo hold is clean.”

    “Mister, I want to see a clean dinner plate or there’ll be no dessert for you.”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Free of immorality or criminality.

  • Clean (adjective)

    Having relatively few impurities.

    “clean steel”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Pure, especially morally or religiously.

    “Our kids can watch this movie because it is clean.”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Not having used drugs or alcohol.

    “I’ve been clean this time for eight months.”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Without restrictions or penalties, or someone having such a record.

    “Unlike you, I’ve never caused any accidents — my record is still clean!”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Not in possession of weapons or contraband such as drugs.

    “I’m clean, officer. You can go ahead and search me if you want.”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Smooth, exact, and performed well.

    “I’ll need a sharper knife to make clean cuts.”

    “a clean leap over a fence”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Total; utter.

  • Clean (adjective)

    Cool or neat.

    “Wow, Dude, those are some clean shoes ya got there!”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Being free of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

    “I want to make sure my fiancé is clean before we are married.”

  • Clean (adjective)

    That does not damage the environment.

    “clean energy;”

    “clean coal”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Free from that which is useless or injurious; without defects.

    “clean land;”

    “clean timber”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Free from restraint or neglect; complete; entire.

  • Clean (adjective)

    Well-proportioned; shapely.

    “clean limbs”

  • Clean (adjective)

    Ascended without falling.

  • Clean (noun)

    Removal of dirt.

    “This place needs a clean.”

  • Clean (noun)

    The first part of the event clean and jerk in which the weight is brought from the ground to the shoulders.

  • Clean (verb)

    To remove dirt from a place or object.

    “Can you clean the windows today?”

  • Clean (verb)

    To tidy up, make a place neat.

    “Clean your room right now!”

  • Clean (verb)

    To remove equipment from a climbing route after it was previously lead climbed.

  • Clean (verb)

    To make things clean in general.

    “She just likes to clean. That’s why I married her.”

  • Clean (verb)

    To remove unnecessary files, etc. from (a directory, etc.).

  • Clean (verb)

    To brush the ice lightly in front of a moving rock to remove any debris and ensure a correct line; less vigorous than a sweep.

  • Clean (verb)

    To purge a raw of any blemishes caused by the scanning process such as brown tinting and poor color contrast.

  • Clean (verb)

    To remove guts and/or scales of a butchered animal.

  • Clean (adverb)

    Fully and completely.

    “He was stabbed clean through.”

    “You must be clean mad.”

  • Pure (adjective)

    Free of flaws or imperfections; unsullied.

  • Pure (adjective)

    Free of foreign material or pollutants.

  • Pure (adjective)

    Free of qualities; clean.

  • Pure (adjective)

    Mere; that and that only.

    “That idea is pure madness!”

  • Pure (adjective)

    Done for its own sake instead of serving another branch of science.

  • Pure (adjective)

    Of a single, simple sound or tone; said of some vowels and the unaspirated consonants.

  • Pure (adjective)

    Without harmonics or overtones; not harsh or discordant.

  • Pure (adverb)

    to a great extent or degree; extremely; exceedingly.

    “You’re pure busy.”

  • Pure (noun)

    Feces, especially dog feces gathered in pre-20th-century England for use in the tanning of leather.

  • Pure (noun)

    alternative form of puer

  • Pure (verb)

    to hit (the ball) completely cleanly and accurately

    “Tiger Woods pured his first drive straight down the middle of the fairway.”

Wiktionary
  • Clean (adjective)

    free from dirt, marks, or stains

    “keep the wound clean”

    “the room was spotlessly clean”

  • Clean (adjective)

    having been washed since last worn or used

    “a clean blouse”

  • Clean (adjective)

    (of paper) not yet marked by writing or drawing

    “he copied the advert on to a clean sheet of paper”

  • Clean (adjective)

    (of a person) attentive to personal hygiene

    “by nature he was clean and neat”

  • Clean (adjective)

    free from pollutants or unpleasant substances

    “we will create a cleaner, safer environment”

  • Clean (adjective)

    relating to a diet consisting of unprocessed, unrefined, and nutrient-rich food, typically eaten as small meals throughout the day

    “I’m amazed at how much energy clean eating gives me”

    “you have to eat clean foods to change your physique”

  • Clean (adjective)

    free from or producing relatively little radioactive contamination.

  • Clean (adjective)

    (of timber) free from knots

    “the forester and the sawyer reject timber that is not straight and clean”

  • Clean (adjective)

    morally uncontaminated; pure; innocent

    “clean living”

  • Clean (adjective)

    not sexually offensive or obscene

    “it’s all good clean fun”

  • Clean (adjective)

    showing or having no record of offences or crimes

    “a clean driving licence is essential for the job”

  • Clean (adjective)

    played or done according to the rules

    “we are not completely sure that the elections will be clean and fair”

  • Clean (adjective)

    not possessing or containing anything illegal, especially drugs or stolen goods

    “I searched him and his luggage, and he was clean”

  • Clean (adjective)

    (of a person) not taking or having taken drugs or alcohol

    “I had been here for only a fortnight and clean for three weeks”

  • Clean (adjective)

    free from ceremonial defilement, according to Mosaic Law or other religious codes.

  • Clean (adjective)

    free from irregularities; having a smooth edge or surface

    “a clean fracture of the leg”

  • Clean (adjective)

    having a simple, well-defined, and pleasing shape

    “the clean lines and pared-down planes of modernism”

  • Clean (adjective)

    (of an action) smoothly and skilfully done

    “he took a clean catch”

  • Clean (adjective)

    (of a taste, sound, or smell) giving a clear and distinctive impression to the senses; sharp and fresh

    “clean, fresh, natural flavours”

  • Clean (adverb)

    so as to be free from dirt, marks, or unwanted matter

    “the room had been washed clean”

  • Clean (adverb)

    in a way that involves the consumption of unprocessed, unrefined, and nutrient-rich food

    “plain oatmeal is a staple for anyone who’s eating clean”

  • Clean (adverb)

    used to emphasize the completeness of a reported action, condition, or experience

    “he was knocked clean off his feet”

    “I clean forgot her birthday”

  • Clean (verb)

    make clean; remove dirt, marks, or stains from

    “clean your teeth properly after meals”

    “I cleaned up my room”

  • Clean (verb)

    remove the innards of (fish or poultry) prior to cooking

    “there are a variety of ways to cook the herring, but it must first be gutted and cleaned”

  • Clean (noun)

    an act of cleaning something

    “he gave the room a clean”

Oxford Dictionary
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