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  1. Greek tragedy concerns a single problem that becomes more and more urgent until it culminates in crime. From the Cambridge English Corpus. Information from unconventional sources not related to the industry carries the extra burden of having to be proved relevant or urgent. From the Cambridge English Corpus.

  2. We've come to deliver an urgent message. an urgent appeal for assistance He addressed us in an urgent manner. An urgent voice came over the intercom, telling us to leave the building immediately. Recent Examples on the Web Policy maker have largely ignored this urgent reality.

  3. urgent adjective (REPEATED) formal. ( especially of a person's actions) repeated and determined in trying to get or do something: His urgent pleas of innocence made no difference to the judge's decision. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  4. 1. compelling or requiring immediate action or attention; imperative; pressing. an urgent matter. 2. insistent or earnest in solicitation; importunate, as a person. an urgent pleader. 3. expressed with insistence, as requests or appeals. an urgent tone of voice.

  5. compelling or requiring immediate action or attention; dire; pressing: an urgent matter. Synonyms: desperate, imperative. insistent or earnest in solicitation; importunate, as a person: an urgent pleader. expressed with insistence, as requests or appeals: an urgent tone of voice. urgent. / ˈɜːdʒənsɪ; ˈɜːdʒənt /.

  6. URGENT translate: penting. Learn more in the Cambridge English-Malay Dictionary.

  7. If something is urgent it requires immediate attention or action. If you break your leg, you'll need urgent attention at the hospital — that means the doctors will tend to you without delay. Urgent comes from the Latin word urgentem, meaning "to press hard, urge."

  8. Origin of Urgent. Middle English from Old French from Latin urgēns urgent- present participle of urgēre to urge. From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition. Latin urgentem ('pressing') from urgere ('to press'). From Wiktionary.

  9. Definition of urgent adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. urgent. Word family (noun) urgency (adjective) urgent (adverb) urgently. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ur‧gent /ˈɜːdʒənt $ ˈɜːr-/ S3 adjective 1 very important and needing to be dealt with immediately He was in urgent need of medical attention.

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