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tame
[teym]
adjective
changed from the wild or savage state; domesticated.
a tame bear.
Antonyms: wildwithout the savageness or fear of humans normal in wild animals; gentle, fearless, or without shyness, as if domesticated.
That lion acts as tame as a house cat.
tractable, docile, or submissive, as a person or the disposition.
lacking in excitement; dull; insipid.
a very tame party.
spiritless or pusillanimous.
not to be taken very seriously; without real power or importance; serviceable but harmless.
They kept a tame scientist around.
brought into service; rendered useful and manageable; under control, as natural resources or a source of power.
cultivated or improved by cultivation, as a plant or its fruit.
verb (used with object)
to make tame; domesticate; make tractable.
to deprive of courage, ardor, or zest.
to deprive of interest, excitement, or attractiveness; make dull.
to soften; tone down.
to harness or control; render useful, as a source of power.
to cultivate, as land or plants.
verb (used without object)
to become tame.
tame
/ teɪm /
adjective
changed by man from a naturally wild state into a tractable, domesticated, or cultivated condition
(of animals) not fearful of human contact
lacking in spirit or initiative; meek or submissive
a tame personality
flat, insipid, or uninspiring
a tame ending to a book
slow-moving
a tame current
verb
to make tame; domesticate
to break the spirit of, subdue, or curb
to tone down, soften, or mitigate
Other Word Forms
- tamely adverb
- tameness noun
- tamer noun
- overtame adjective
- overtamely adverb
- overtameness noun
- untame adjective
- untamely adverb
- untameness noun
- tamability noun
- tamable adjective
- tameless adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of tame1
Word History and Origins
Origin of tame1
Example Sentences
Dobson believed children to be little performers who manipulate adults and need to be tamed.
Drones, aircraft and hand crews worked for days to tame the fire, successfully stopping it from spreading across the dense forest that surrounds the famous Doerner Fir tree in Oregon’s Coast Range mountains.
On the one hand Klopp's 'heavy metal' football was tamed by an appreciation of territorial dominance, on the other Guardiola used Klopp's ideas to adapt to the rough-and-tumble of Premier League life.
Boris Previsic, the director of the University of Lucerne's Institute for the Culture of the Alps, says that many Swiss, at least in the cities, had begun to believe they had tamed the alpine environment.
Compared with the flurry of blockbuster deals that reverberated around them in the National League, the Dodgers’ moves were mild, tame and certainly cost conscientious.
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When To Use
When an animal is tame, it has been domesticated, a sense metaphorically extended to someone or something considered "subdued," "boring," or "mild."Tame is also a verb for putting something wild under control.
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