Adjective
-
unfamiliar
"new experiences"
"experiences new to him"
"errors of someone new to the job"
-
(of crops) harvested at an early stage of development
before complete maturity
"new potatoes"
"young corn"
-
used of a living language
being the current stage in its development
"Modern English"
"New Hebrew is Israeli Hebrew"
-
in use after medieval times
"New Eqyptian was the language of the 18th to 21st dynasties"
-
(of a new kind or fashion) gratuitously new
"newfangled ideas"
"she buys all these new-fangled machines and never uses them"
-
unaffected by use or exposure
"it looks like new"
-
other than the former one(s)
different
"they now have a new leaders"
"my new car is four years old but has only 15,000 miles on it"
"ready to take a new direction"
-
having no previous example or precedent or parallel
"a time of unexampled prosperity"
-
lacking training or experience
"the new men were eager to fight"
"raw recruits"
-
original and of a kind not seen before
"the computer produced a completely novel proof of a well-known theorem"
-
not of long duration
having just (or relatively recently) come into being or been made or acquired or discovered
"a new law"
"new cars"
"a new comet"
"a new friend"
"a new year"
"the New World"
Adverb
-
very recently
"they are newly married"
"newly raised objections"
"a newly arranged hairdo"
"grass new washed by the rain"
"a freshly cleaned floor"
"we are fresh out of tomatoes"