shallow
Adjective
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Lacking physical depth;
Having little spatial extension downward or inward from an outer surface or backward or outward from a center (synset 300694973)"shallow water"; "a shallow dish"; "a shallow cut"; "a shallow closet"; "established a shallow beachhead"; "hit the ball to shallow left field"similar to:- ankle-deep, knee-deep - coming only to the ankle or knee
- fordable - shallow enough to be crossed by walking or riding on an animal or in a vehicle
- neritic - relating to the region of shallow water adjoining the seacoast
- superficial - occurring on or near the surface of the skin
- reefy, shelfy, shelvy, shoaly - full of submerged reefs or sandbanks or shoals
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Not deep or strong;
Not affecting one deeply (synset 300696805)"shallow breathing"; "a night of shallow fretful sleep"; "in a shallow trance" -
Lacking depth of intellect or knowledge;
Concerned only with what is obvious (synset 301881326)"shallow people"; "his arguments seemed shallow and tedious"similar to: superficial - concerned with or comprehending only what is apparent or obvious; not deep or penetrating emotionally or intellectually
Noun
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A stretch of shallow water (synset 109456038)
is a type of: body of water, water - the part of the earth's surface covered with water (such as a river or lake or ocean)same as: shoal
Verb
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Make shallow (synset 200537223)
"The silt shallowed the canal"same as: shoal
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Become shallow (synset 200537068)
"the lake shallowed over time"is a type of: change - undergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original naturesame as: shoal
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