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objective
noun
something
you
are
trying
hard
to
achieve
or
reach
•
Our
main
objective
is
to
finish
the
project
by
Friday
.
Our
main
objective
is
to
finish
the
project
by
Friday
.
•
The
coach
set
a
clear
objective
for
the
team
:
win
the
championship
.
The
coach
set
a
clear
objective
for
the
team
:
win
the
championship
.
From
Medieval
Latin
“
objectivus
,”
from
Latin
“
objectum
”
meaning
“
something
thrown
before
.”
adjective
based
only
on
facts
and
not
influenced
by
personal
feelings
or
opinions
•
Try
to
be
objective
and
look
at
the
facts
,
not
your
feelings
.
Try
to
be
objective
and
look
at
the
facts
,
not
your
feelings
.
•
Scientists
collect
data
so
they
can
make
objective
conclusions
.
Scientists
collect
data
so
they
can
make
objective
conclusions
.
From
the
same
Latin
root
as
the
noun
sense
;
the
meaning
of
‘
impartial
’
emerged
in
the
17th
century
.
noun
the
main
lens
at
the
front
of
a
microscope
,
telescope
,
or
camera
that
gathers
light
from
the
object
being
viewed
•
She
carefully
cleaned
the
microscope's
objective
before
starting
the
experiment
.
She
carefully
cleaned
the
microscope's
objective
before
starting
the
experiment
.
•
The
photographer
swapped
the
camera's
objective
for
a
wide-angle
lens
.
The
photographer
swapped
the
camera's
objective
for
a
wide-angle
lens
.
Borrowed
into
scientific
English
in
the
19th
century
to
name
the
lens
closest
to
the
object
.
adjective
relating
to
or
forming
the
object
case
in
grammar
•
In
'She
thanked
him'
,
'him'
is
an
objective
pronoun
.
In
'She
thanked
him'
,
'him'
is
an
objective
pronoun
.
•
English
no
longer
marks
nouns
for
an
objective
case
like
some
other
languages
do
.
English
no
longer
marks
nouns
for
an
objective
case
like
some
other
languages
do
.
Usage
in
grammar
dates
to
the
early
19th
century
,
extending
the
sense
of
‘
object
’
in
a
sentence
.