absolute

absolute — adjective

1. as big, full, or complete as something can possibly be, with nothing missing and

1.形容詞B2
釋義

as big, full, or complete as something can possibly be, with nothing missing and nothing held back.

例句

Tariq stared at the sleeping baby in absolute silence, afraid to breathe.

absolute + abstract noun (silence, calm, darkness)

The new bridge needs absolute precision when the steel beams are joined.

absolute + precision/accuracy for technical contexts

同義詞
  • complete

    neutral and more general; works with both positive and negative nouns

  • total

    everyday wording; often interchangeable with 'absolute' in this sense

  • utter

    stronger and usually negative — 'utter chaos', 'utter nonsense'

反義詞
  • partial

    describes something incomplete or limited

  • limited

    applies to scope or quantity rather than emotional intensity

用法筆記

Subject is usually an abstract noun describing a state or quality (silence, trust, beauty, chaos). Cannot be graded — avoid 'very absolute' or 'more absolute'.

常見錯誤

The room was very absolute quiet.
The room was in absolute silence.
💡'absolute' is non-gradable; pair it directly with a noun, not with 'very'.
I have an absolute headache.
I have a terrible headache.
💡'absolute' fits abstract states like silence or trust, not physical symptoms.

2. placed before a noun to make a strong feeling or judgement sound louder, often i

2.形容詞B2
釋義

placed before a noun to make a strong feeling or judgement sound louder, often in casual speech when you really want to be heard.

例句

Zara says her new neighbour is an absolute angel with the children.

informal emphasis: absolute + positive evaluative noun

The traffic on Friday night was an absolute nightmare.

absolute + nightmare/disaster/mess

同義詞
  • complete

    less colourful; safer in writing

  • total

    very close in feel — 'a total nightmare' = 'an absolute nightmare'

  • downright

    stronger and more disapproving

文法句型

absolute + noun (always before the noun)

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 1: this sense ALWAYS comes before a noun and the noun itself is evaluative (angel, nightmare, joke, genius). Sense 1 takes more neutral nouns (silence, precision). Common in spoken English; less natural in formal writing.

常見錯誤

The film was absolute.
The film was an absolute disaster.
💡this sense cannot stand alone after 'be'; it must sit before a noun.
He is absolutely an idiot.
He is an absolute idiot.
💡for emphasis before a noun, use the adjective form, not the adverb.

3. true or correct on its own terms — its meaning does not change when you compare

3.形容詞C1
釋義

true or correct on its own terms — its meaning does not change when you compare it with other things or measure it from a different angle.

例句

The professor argued that there is no absolute truth in moral philosophy.

absolute + truth/value/right (philosophical context)

Scientists measured the absolute temperature of the gas inside the sealed tank.

absolute + temperature/value (science)

同義詞
  • fixed

    everyday word for something that does not change

  • fundamental

    stresses that something is at the base of all reasoning

  • intrinsic

    formal; means belonging to the thing itself, not to comparison

反義詞
  • relative

    the standard opposite — judged by comparison with something else

文法句型

absolute + noun (e.g. truth, value, standard)

用法筆記

Often contrasted with 'relative'. Common in academic, scientific and ethical writing. Distinguish from sense 1 (which means 'as much as possible') and sense 2 (which is just emphasis): this sense is about whether the meaning depends on a comparison.

常見錯誤

Her happiness was absolute compared to mine.
Her happiness was greater than mine.
💡'absolute' in this sense rejects comparison; using 'compared to' contradicts it.
The price went up in absolute percentage.
The price went up in absolute terms.
💡the fixed phrase is 'in absolute terms', not 'in absolute percentage'.

4. describing a leader or government whose right to decide is not held back by laws

4.形容詞C1
釋義

describing a leader or government whose right to decide is not held back by laws, voters, or other people — they can do whatever they choose.

例句

King Louis XIV ruled France as an absolute monarch for over seventy years.

absolute monarch / ruler

After the coup, the general claimed absolute power over the small island nation.

claim / seize / hold absolute power

同義詞
  • unlimited

    neutral; focuses on the absence of limits rather than the political flavour

  • unrestricted

    formal; common in legal or policy writing

  • supreme

    ranks the holder above all others, not just unlimited

反義詞
  • limited

    as in 'a limited monarchy' — power restricted by laws or a constitution

  • constitutional

    specifically describes rule that follows a written constitution

文法句型

absolute + ruler/monarch/power/control/authority

用法筆記

Object/noun is almost always one of: ruler, monarch, power, control, authority, command. Distinguish from sense 1: 'absolute silence' describes a state; 'absolute power' describes a relationship in which no one can say no.

常見錯誤

The teacher has absolute over the classroom.
The teacher has absolute control over the classroom.
💡this sense always needs a power-related noun after it.
My boss is absolute in this office.
My boss has absolute authority in this office.
💡predicative use sounds wrong; place 'absolute' before a noun like 'authority' or 'power'.