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direct
adjective as in honest
Strongest matches
blunt, candid, explicit, forthright, sincere, straightforward, unambiguous, unequivocal
adjective as in undeviating; uninterrupted
Strongest match
Weak matches
beeline, horizontal, in bee line, in straight line, linear, nonstop, not crooked, point-blank, shortest, straight ahead, straightaway, through, unbroken, unswerving
adjective as in face-to-face; next to
Strongest matches
Strong matches
verb as in manage, oversee
Strong matches
administer, boss, dispose, dominate, govern, influence, ordain, quarterback, regulate, rule, shepherd, superintend
verb as in give instructions; teach
verb as in point in a direction; guide
verb as in send, usually by mail system
Example Sentences
She said Assad "is not the enemy of the United States because Syria does not pose a direct threat to the United States" - and defended meeting him in 2017, during Trump's first term.
They recognized that the club’s direct democratic process — and its annual elections of three members of its 15-person board — was a vulnerability, and they assembled the first stages of a plan: a hostile takeover.
In conversations with Salon, many expressed hope that Trump might take up their own pet issue, like dismantling the administrative state, ending diversity initiatives or directing public funds to religious schools.
It's a direct substitution of fool's gold for the real thing.
The cult leader directed the killings in the hope they would start a race war.
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When To Use
What are other ways to say direct?
To direct is to give information for guidance, or instructions or orders for a course of procedure: to direct someone to the station. To conduct is to precede or escort them to a place, sometimes with a degree of ceremony: to conduct a guest to his room. Guide implies continuous presence or agency in showing or indicating a course: to guide a traveler. To lead is to bring them onward in a course, guiding by contact or by going in advance; hence, figuratively, to influence or induce to some course of conduct: to lead a procession; to lead astray.
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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