Vague is French for ocean wave, from the Latin vagusmeaning 'wandering'. Insofar as any individual wave is indistinct, changeable and transient, vague has come to mean poorly defined, indefinite and incompletely known or understood.
"His intentions were very vague."
One example is - The answer was to vague to merit a point. Another example is - The witness description of the suspect was just too vague.
He was very vague about the subject of his new book.
This question is a bit vague.
Something that is vague is indistinct, uncertain, indefinite, or unclear. Something that is ambiguous is unclear or inexact and can be interpreted multiple ways. These two words are also synonyms.
Yes, it is an adjective. It means unclear or indistinct.
There are several: vague, hazy, faint, dull, obscure, murky, fuzzy, unclear, indefinite.
indefinite, indistinct, ill-defined
misty - vague - foggy - nebulous - dim - indistinct
vague ambiguous equivocal fuzzy imprecise indefinite inexact undefined general
vague ambiguous equivocal fuzzy imprecise indefinite inexact undefined general
This word means that something is obscure, not clearly defined, imprecise or vague.
Vague is French for ocean wave, from the Latin vagusmeaning 'wandering'. Insofar as any individual wave is indistinct, changeable and transient, vague has come to mean poorly defined, indefinite and incompletely known or understood.
perplexing, inexplicit, impalpable, indefinite, polysemous, multivocal, discursive, digressive, palavorous, indistinct, unspecific
A sentence using nebulous:After taking the test, I felt nebulous.Nebulous (adj) means hazy, vague, confused, and indistinct
frizzy, fluffly, woolly, downy indistinct, blurred, vague, distorted, unclear, bleary, out of focus, ill-defined