[go: nahoru, domu]

English

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Etymology

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From un- +‎ complex.

Adjective

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uncomplex (comparative more uncomplex, superlative most uncomplex)

  1. Not complex; synonym of simple.
    • 1923, Elizabeth Bowen, “The Confidante”, in Encounters, page 50:
      To force you into the straighter, broader courses of the uncomplex would be as cruel as to upset a bowl with gold-fish in it and leave them gasping on the tablecloth.