- vague
- 01. I have only a [vague] memory of Carson City because we moved away when I was just four years old.02. The description of the bank robber was too [vague] to be of any use.03. The document was [vaguely] worded and confusing.04. Very young children only have a [vague] idea of what it means to die.05. The girl could [vaguely] remember seeing a car coming towards her, and then everything was a blank until she woke up in the hospital.06. What you're telling me is [vaguely] familiar. I must have read about it at some point.07. We could just make out the [vague] form of a person standing before us in the fog.08. He was so [vague] in his recommendations that no one knows quite what he was suggesting.09. The old woman's memories of the event are quite [vague] because it happened so long ago.10. I don't have the [vaguest] idea of what you're talking about.11. The President's answer as to whether the United States was prepared to use force was deliberately [vague].12. Politicians are often [vague] about what they will do if elected so that no one can accuse them of breaking their promises.13. The young man had the [vague] look on his face of someone on drugs.14. We could only see a [vague] outline of the house through the darkness and pouring rain.15. Your face is [vaguely] familiar, but I can't remember where we met.16. Bill Cosby once said that the first law in advertising is to avoid the concrete promise, and cultivate the delightfully [vague].
Grammatical examples in English. 2013.