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independent
[ in-di-pen-duhnt ]
adjective
- not influenced or controlled by others in matters of opinion, conduct, etc.; thinking or acting for oneself:
an independent thinker.
- not subject to another's authority or jurisdiction; autonomous; free:
an independent businessman.
- not influenced by the thought or action of others:
independent research.
- not dependent; not depending or contingent upon something else for existence, operation, etc.
- not relying on another or others for aid or support.
- rejecting others' aid or support; refusing to be under obligation to others.
- possessing a competency:
to be financially independent.
- sufficient to support a person without their having to work:
an independent income.
- executed or originating outside a given unit, agency, business, etc.; external:
an independent inquiry.
- working for oneself or for a small, privately owned business.
- expressive of a spirit of independence; self-confident; unconstrained:
a free and independent citizen.
- free from party commitments in voting:
the independent voter.
- Mathematics. (of a quantity or function) not depending upon another for its value.
- Grammar. capable of standing syntactically as a complete sentence: Compare dependent ( def 4 ), main 1( def 4 ).
an independent clause.
- Logic.
- (of a set of propositions) having no one proposition deducible from the others.
- (of a proposition) belonging to such a set.
- Statistics. statistically independent.
- (initial capital letter) Ecclesiastical. adhering or relating to Independency.
noun
- an independent person or thing.
- a small, privately owned business:
The conglomerates are buying up the independents.
- Politics. a person who votes for candidates, measures, etc., in accordance with their own judgment and without regard to the endorsement of, or the positions taken by, any party.
- (initial capital letter) Ecclesiastical. an adherent of Independency.
- British. a Congregationalist.
Independent
1/ ˌɪԻɪˈɛԻəԳ /
noun
- (in England) a member of the Congregational Church
adjective
- of or relating to Independency
independent
2/ ˌɪԻɪˈɛԻəԳ /
adjective
- free from control in action, judgment, etc; autonomous
- not dependent on anything else for function, validity, etc; separate
two independent units make up this sofa
- not reliant on the support, esp financial support, of others
- capable of acting for oneself or on one's own
a very independent little girl
- providing a large unearned sum towards one's support (esp in the phrases independent income, independent means )
- living on an unearned income
- maths (of a system of equations) not linearly dependent See also independent variable
- statistics
- (of two or more variables) distributed so that the value taken by one variable will have no effect on that taken by another or others
- (of two or more events) such that the probability of all occurring equals the product of their individual probabilities Compare statistical dependence
- logic of a set of propositions
- not validly derivable from one another, so that if the propositions are the axioms of some theory none can be dispensed with
- not logically related, so that in no case can the truth value of one be inferred from those of the others
noun
- an independent person or thing
- a person who is not affiliated to or who acts independently of a political party
Derived Forms
- ˌԻˈԻԳٱ, adverb
Other 51Թ Forms
- d·ԻIJԳ· adverb
- ԴDzi··ԻIJԳ adjective
- ԴDzi··ԻIJԳ·ly adverb
- i··ԻIJԳ adjective
- i··ԻIJԳ·ly adverb
- d·d·ԻIJԳ adjective
- pseudo·d·ԻIJԳ· adverb
- ܲȴ-d·ԻIJԳ adjective
- quasi-d·ԻIJԳ· adverb
- p·d·ԻIJԳ adjective
- super·d·ԻIJԳ· adverb
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of independent1
Idioms and Phrases
- independent of, irrespective of; regardless of:
Independent of monetary considerations, it was a promising position.
Example Sentences
The post said the decision had been made after a "thorough and independent investigation" and could be appealed.
“Congress directly authorized and funded CPB to be a private nonprofit corporation wholly independent of the federal government,” the CPB said in a statement.
Baroness Helena Kennedy KC led an independent expert group that called for new criminal offences directly targeting prejudice and contempt for women.
Sing Tao US wrote in a government filing it is “editorially independent” from its Chinese parent company.
Media rights group RSF warned on Friday about "an alarming deterioration in press freedom" in the United States under Trump and "unprecedented" difficulties for independent journalists around the world.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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