English English Dictionary

English - English

impress in English:

1. to make someone feel admiration and respect to make someone feel admiration and respect



2. impressive impressive


Your results are really impressive. Congratulations!
That's impressive.
Unless it's something fairly impressive, I won't remember it.
His speech was very impressive. You should have been there.
You've both been very impressive today. I'm proud of you.
Your curriculum is impressive, when could you start working for us?
It's impressive that he's popular with just a bit part!
Her eyes, a deep blue, were quite impressive.
That was another impressive fall-flat-on-your-face ... Hey, you alright, Sophie? Can you stand?
Two months later the sauce was on the shelves of one of Britain's supermarket chains, and Levi is now running an impressive and profitable company.
We knew he was good but we didn't expect his results to be as impressive as they were.
China has demonstrated impressive economic progress.
The impressive rock formations at Meteora are worth seeing.
The new railway station looks very impressive. It’s much bigger and better than the old one.
Impressive isn't it. A company that's only just been established but it's already got many outlets and is in fashion.

English word "impress"(impressive) occurs in sets:

Słowotwórstwo - angielski

3. to thrill sb to thrill sb



4. impression impression


He suddenly started doing an impression of an announcer and we all cracked up.
A friend I went with on our first trip abroad had his wallet pickpocketed. I don't think it left a very good impression.
first impression
After the war, the diligence and the saving of the Japanese gave an impression which is strong in the American.
That commercial makes a strong impression - especially the music. It stays in your head.
It is impossible to escape the impression that people commonly use false standards of measurement — that they seek power, success and wealth for themselves and admire them in others, and that they underestimate what is of true value in life.
He told me that when he was young, he was very eager to be popular, and wanted to make a good impression on everyone.
My impression of this government is that they need a more forceful economic policy, otherwise they'll encounter large problems in the future.
The impression that many German wines are sweet, and don't go well with food, is widespread.
This statement-of-purpose essay has no consistency in how the points are laid out and gives a distracted impression.
Firstly, I think that the first time each foreigner is in China, the earliest impression is certainly the size of the country.
Seeing the briskly working toy consultants also left a strong impression.
Today's Beijing has given me a very deep impression and aroused my curiosity.
You can’t go out dressed like that. It’ll give people a really bad impression.
I had received the impression the Fine Folks were people who did the best they could with the sense they had, but Aunt Alexandra was of the opinion that the longer a family had been squatting on one patch of land the finer it was.

English word "impress"(impression) occurs in sets:

word formation