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bad
adjective
-
bad
,
worse
,
worst
of
poor
quality
,
unpleasant
,
or
not
good
at
all
•
The
cake
tasted
bad
,
so
no
one
ate
it
.
The
cake
tasted
bad
,
so
no
one
ate
it
.
•
His
handwriting
is
so
bad
that
I
can
hardly
read
it
.
His
handwriting
is
so
bad
that
I
can
hardly
read
it
.
adjective
-
bad
,
worse
,
worst
morally
wrong
,
harmful
,
or
evil
•
Stealing
is
bad
,
no
matter
how
small
the
item
is
.
Stealing
is
bad
,
no
matter
how
small
the
item
is
.
•
Her
parents
warned
her
to
stay
away
from
bad
people
.
Her
parents
warned
her
to
stay
away
from
bad
people
.
noun
informal
:
a
mistake
or
fault
,
especially
in
the
phrase
“
my
bad
”
•
Oops
,
bad
!
I
sent
the
wrong
file
.
Oops
,
bad
!
I
sent
the
wrong
file
.
•
She
laughed
and
said
, "
My bad
,
I'll
fix
it
right
away
."
She
laughed
and
said
, "
My bad
,
I'll
fix
it
right
away
."
adjective
-
bad
,
worse
,
worst
slang
:
extremely
good
,
impressive
,
or
tough
•
That
skateboard
trick
you
just
did
was
bad
!
That
skateboard
trick
you
just
did
was
bad
!
•
She
’
s
one
bad
drummer
;
the
crowd
loved
her
solo
.
She
’
s
one
bad
drummer
;
the
crowd
loved
her
solo
.
badly
adverb
-
badly
,
worse
,
worst
in
a
poor
or
unacceptable
way
;
not
well
•
She
plays
the
piano
badly
,
hitting
many
wrong
notes
.
She
plays
the
piano
badly
,
hitting
many
wrong
notes
.
•
The
paint
was
applied
so
badly
that
streaks
covered
the
wall
.
The
paint
was
applied
so
badly
that
streaks
covered
the
wall
.
Formed
from
the
adjective
“
bad
”
+
the
adverbial
suffix
“
-ly
,”
first
recorded
in
Middle
English
.
adverb
-
badly
,
worse
,
worst
seriously
or
severely
•
The
cyclist
was
badly
injured
in
the
accident
.
The
cyclist
was
badly
injured
in
the
accident
.
•
The
house
was
badly
damaged
by
the
storm
.
The
house
was
badly
damaged
by
the
storm
.
adverb
-
badly
,
worse
,
worst
very
much
;
to
a
great
degree
•
I
want
to
see
you
so
badly
.
I
want
to
see
you
so
badly
.
•
She
missed
her
family
badly
during
her
trip
.
She
missed
her
family
badly
during
her
trip
.
bid
verb
-
bid
,
bidding
,
bids
,
bade
,
bidden
to
say
or
express
something
to
someone
,
especially
greetings
,
farewell
,
or
good
wishes
•
He
bid
her
farewell
with
a
gentle
bow
.
He
bid
her
farewell
with
a
gentle
bow
.
•
The
knight
bade
the
king
good
night
before
leaving
the
hall
.
The
knight
bade
the
king
good
night
before
leaving
the
hall
.
Old
English
‘
biddan
’
also
carried
the
sense
‘
to
utter
,
to
say
’.
The
greeting
and
farewell
usage
survived
mainly
in
formal
and
literary
contexts
.
verb
-
bid
,
bidding
,
bids
,
bade
,
bidden
to
order
or
command
someone
to
do
something
(
archaic
or
literary
)
•
The
queen
bid
the
messenger
speak
.
The
queen
bid
the
messenger
speak
.
•
He
bade
his
servant
bring
more
firewood
.
He
bade
his
servant
bring
more
firewood
.
forbid
verb
-
forbid
,
forbidding
,
forbids
,
forbade
,
forbad
,
forbidden
to
officially
or
firmly
tell
someone
that
they
must
not
do
something
•
The
school
forbids
students
from
using
cell
phones
in
class
.
The
school
forbids
students
from
using
cell
phones
in
class
.
•
My
doctor
forbade
me
to
do
any
heavy
lifting
after
the
surgery
.
My
doctor
forbade
me
to
do
any
heavy
lifting
after
the
surgery
.
Old
English
‘
forbēodan
’,
from
‘
for-
’ (
intensive
)
+
‘
bēodan
’ (“
to
command
”);
related
to
German
‘
verbieten
’.
verb
-
forbid
,
forbidding
,
forbids
,
forbade
,
forbad
,
forbidden
to
make
something
impossible
or
very
unlikely
to
happen
•
The
steep
cliff
face
forbids
any
easy
passage
to
the
beach
below
.
The
steep
cliff
face
forbids
any
easy
passage
to
the
beach
below
.
•
His
busy
schedule
forbids
him
from
joining
us
tonight
.
His
busy
schedule
forbids
him
from
joining
us
tonight
.
Same
historical
origin
as
the
primary
sense
,
with
the
meaning
of
‘
to
prevent
’
emerging
in
Middle
English
.