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    shallow
    /ˈʃaləʊ/

    adjective

    • 1. of little depth: "serve the noodles in a shallow bowl"
    • 2. not exhibiting, requiring, or capable of serious thought: "a shallow analysis of contemporary society"

    noun

    • 1. an area of the sea, a lake, or a river where the water is not very deep.

    verb

    • 1. (of the sea, a lake, or a river) become less deep over time or in a particular place: "the boat ground to a halt where the water shallowed"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. consisting of very few people or things: We are dealing with a very shallow pool of candidates. not completely certain or convincing: Many natives see their rural way of life here increasingly circumscribed by outside " environmentalists " with shallow local roots. shallow breathing.

  3. The meaning of SHALLOW is having little depth. How to use shallow in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Shallow.

  4. The adjective shallow can describe things that aren't very deep, like a shallow puddle, or people who don't have much emotional or intellectual depth, like shallow people who judge others on their looks and how much money they have.

  5. Shallow definition: of little depth; not deep. See examples of SHALLOW used in a sentence.

  6. shallow. adjective. /ˈʃæləʊ/. /ˈʃæləʊ/. (comparative shallower, superlative shallowest) not having much distance between the top or surface and the bottom. a shallow dish/pan/bowl. a shallow sea/lake/pool/pond. They were playing in the shallow end (= of the swimming pool).

  7. shal·low. (shăl′ō) adj. shal·low·er, shal·low·est. 1. Measuring little from bottom to top or surface; lacking physical depth. 2. Lacking depth of intellect, emotion, or knowledge: "This is a shallow parody of America" (Lloyd Rose). 3. Marked by insufficient inhalation of air; weak: shallow respirations. 4.

  8. SHALLOW definition: 1. not deep: 2. not showing any interest in serious ideas. Learn more.