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Impress   /ɪmprˈɛs/  /ˈɪmprˌɛs/   Listen
Impress

verb
(past & past part. impressed; pres. part. impressing)
1.
Have an emotional or cognitive impact upon.  Synonyms: affect, move, strike.  "This behavior struck me as odd"
2.
Impress positively.
3.
Produce or try to produce a vivid impression of.  Synonyms: ingrain, instill.
4.
Mark or stamp with or as if with pressure.  Synonym: imprint.
5.
Reproduce by printing.  Synonym: print.
6.
Take (someone) against his will for compulsory service, especially on board a ship.  Synonym: shanghai.
7.
Dye (fabric) before it is spun.  Synonym: yarn-dye.
noun
(pl. impresses)
1.
The act of coercing someone into government service.  Synonym: impressment.



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"Impress" Quotes from Famous Books



... tea-pot and some spoons which had been left in the room on the previous evening are gone,—the window is open, and you observe the mark of a dirty hand on the window-frame, and perhaps, in addition to that, you notice the impress of a hob-nailed shoe on the gravel outside. All these phenomena have struck your attention instantly, and before two minutes have passed you say, "Oh, somebody has broken open the window, entered the room, and run off with the spoons and the tea-pot!" That speech is ...
— Lectures and Essays • T.H. Huxley

... then could have cried with mortification, for all of the great soldiers laughed at me. One of them turned, and said to the only one who was seated, "That is Hamilton's grandson." The man who was seated did not impress me very much. He was younger than the others. He wore a black suit and a black tie, and the three upper buttons of his waistcoat were unfastened. His beard was close-cropped, like a blacking-brush, and he was chewing on a cigar that had burned so far down that I remember wondering ...
— Captain Macklin • Richard Harding Davis

... She wore her own gray hair; and her complexion bore the test of daylight. On entering the room, she made her apologies with some embarrassment. Being the embarrassment of a stranger (and not of a youthful stranger), it failed to impress ...
— Little Novels • Wilkie Collins

... and I gave the driver the address from my memoranda. Through the Strand I was whirled, across Blackfriars Bridge and on through the intricate web of avenues and streets on the Surrey side. The locality did not impress me favorably. There was an abundance of "pubs" and of fried-fish shops where "jellied eels" seemed to be a ...
— Kent Knowles: Quahaug • Joseph C. Lincoln

... modelled in its best features on the Hellenic, that it was essentially weak and unprogressive and, except in religion (where it held great sway) and in the sphere of public amusements, unable permanently to impress itself upon Rome. [4] Thus the literary epoch dates from the conquest of Magna Graecia. After the fall of Tarentum the Romans were suddenly familiarised with the chief products of the Hellenic mind; and the first Punic war which followed, unlike all previous wars, was favourable ...
— A History of Roman Literature - From the Earliest Period to the Death of Marcus Aurelius • Charles Thomas Cruttwell


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