serious

serious
adj.
1 bad/dangerous
VERBS
be, look, seem, sound
become, get

By this time the riots were getting serious.

remain
ADVERB
extremely, fairly, very, etc.
particularly, really, terribly

These are terribly serious allegations.

potentially
PREPOSITION
for

This situation could be very serious for her.

PHRASES
nothing serious

‘Bob's sick.’ ‘Oh, I hope it's nothing serious.’

serious enough to warrant sth

The crime is considered serious enough to warrant a jail term.

2 not joking
VERBS
be, look, sound

Come on, be serious!

become, grow, turn

He became serious all of a sudden.

remain, stay

Please try to stay serious!

ADVERB
extremely, fairly, very, etc.
absolutely, completely, entirely, perfectly, quite, totally
deadly, terribly

Joe is deadly serious in his beliefs.

PREPOSITION
about

Are you serious about resigning?

Serious is used with these nouns: ↑accident, ↑accusation, ↑actor, actress, ↑ailment, ↑allegation, ↑allergy, ↑alternative, ↑analysis, ↑answer, ↑artist, ↑assault, ↑attack, ↑attempt, ↑attention, ↑attitude, ↑bid, ↑blow, ↑blunder, ↑bout, ↑boyfriend, ↑breach, ↑breakdown, ↑burn, ↑business, ↑case, ↑casualty, ↑challenge, ↑challenger, ↑charge, ↑clash, ↑collector, ↑collision, ↑commitment, ↑competition, ↑competitor, ↑complaint, ↑complication, ↑concern, ↑concussion, ↑condition, ↑conflict, ↑confrontation, ↑congestion, ↑consequence, ↑consideration, ↑contamination, ↑contemplation, ↑contender, ↑conversation, ↑corruption, ↑crack, ↑crash, ↑crime, ↑criminal, ↑crisis, ↑criticism, ↑damage, ↑danger, ↑debate, ↑debt, ↑decline, ↑defeat, ↑defect, ↑deficiency, ↑deficit, ↑delay, ↑dent, ↑depression, ↑deterioration, ↑dialogue, ↑difference, ↑difficulty, ↑dilemma, ↑disability, ↑disadvantage, ↑disagreement, ↑disappointment, ↑discrepancy, ↑discussion, ↑disease, ↑disorder, ↑dispute, ↑disruption, ↑dissent, ↑distortion, ↑disturbance, ↑doubt, ↑downturn, ↑drain, ↑drawback, ↑effect, ↑effort, ↑embarrassment, ↑emergency, ↑engagement, ↑enquiry, ↑erosion, ↑error, ↑escalation, ↑expression, ↑face, ↑failing, ↑failure, ↑fashion, ↑fault, ↑felony, ↑fiction, ↑fighting, ↑fire, ↑flaw, ↑foul play, ↑fraud, ↑gap, ↑girlfriend, ↑handicap, ↑harm, ↑hazard, ↑heart attack, ↑hindrance, ↑historian, ↑illness, ↑imbalance, ↑impact, ↑impediment, ↑implication, ↑incident, ↑inconsistency, ↑inconvenience, ↑indigestion, ↑indiscretion, ↑infection, ↑infringement, ↑injury, ↑interest, ↑irregularity, ↑issue, ↑lack, ↑lapse, ↑leak, ↑limitation, ↑look, ↑loss, ↑matter, ↑menace, ↑message, ↑miscalculation, ↑misconduct, ↑misgivings, ↑mishap, ↑mistake, ↑misunderstanding, ↑misuse, ↑mood, ↑move, ↑music, ↑musician, ↑need, ↑neglect, ↑negotiation, ↑note, ↑objection, ↑obstacle, ↑offence, ↑omission, ↑opposition, ↑outbreak, ↑overtone, ↑peril, ↑pest, ↑possibility, ↑prejudice, ↑problem, ↑quarrel, ↑question, ↑reading, ↑recession, ↑reflection, ↑relationship, ↑repercussion, ↑reservation, ↑resistance, ↑responsibility, ↑rethink, ↑reverse, ↑revolt, ↑rift, ↑riot, ↑risk, ↑rival, ↑row, ↑scientist, ↑scrutiny, ↑setback, ↑shopper, ↑shopping, ↑shortage, ↑shortcoming, ↑side effect, ↑situation, ↑split, ↑strait, ↑stroke, ↑study, ↑subject, ↑symptom, ↑talk, ↑test, ↑thinker, ↑thinking, ↑thought, ↑threat, ↑tone, ↑training, ↑trouble, ↑underestimate, ↑undertaking, ↑unrest, ↑violation, ↑violence, ↑voice, ↑weakness, ↑worry, ↑wound, ↑writer

Collocations dictionary. 2013.

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  • serious — I (devoted) adjective ardent, assiduous, decided, dedicated, determined, devout, dogged, dutiful, eager, earnest, faithful, fervent, firm, fixed, intent, loyal, passionate, purposeful, relentless, resolute, resolved, settled, sincere, steadfast,… …   Law dictionary

  • serious — serious, grave, solemn, somber, sedate, staid, sober, earnest may be applied to persons, their looks, or their acts with the meaning not light or frivolous but actually or seemingly weighed down by deep thought, heavy cares, or purposive or… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • serious — [sir′ē əs] adj. [ME seryows < ML seriosus < L serius, grave, orig., prob. weighty, heavy < ? IE base * swer > OE swær, heavy, sad, Goth swers, important, orig., heavy] 1. of, showing, having, or caused by earnestness or deep thought;… …   English World dictionary

  • Serious — may refer to: * Serious (Duran Duran song), a single from the album Liberty * Serious (Duffy song) the fourth single of her debut album. * Serious (Gwen song) , a song from Gwen Stefani s album Love. Angel. Music. Baby. * Serious (TV series) , a… …   Wikipedia

  • Serious — Se ri*ous, a. [L. serius: cf. F. s[ e]rieux, LL. seriosus.] 1. Grave in manner or disposition; earnest; thoughtful; solemn; not light, gay, or volatile. [1913 Webster] He is always serious, yet there is about his manner a graceful ease. Macaulay …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • serious — ► ADJECTIVE 1) demanding or characterized by careful consideration or application. 2) solemn or thoughtful. 3) sincere and in earnest, rather than joking or half hearted. 4) significant or worrying in terms of danger or risk: serious injury. 5)… …   English terms dictionary

  • serious — [adj1] somber, humorless austere, bound, bound and determined*, businesslike, cold sober*, contemplative, deadpan*, deliberate, determined, downbeat*, earnest, funereal, genuine, go for broke*, grave, grim, honest, intent, long faced*, meditative …   New thesaurus

  • serious — mid 15c., expressing earnest purpose or thought (of persons), from M.Fr. sérieux grave, earnest (14c.), from L.L. seriosus, from L. serius weighty, important, grave, probably from a PIE root *swer (Cf. Lith. sveriu to weigh, lift, svarus heavy; O …   Etymology dictionary

  • serious — se|ri|ous W1S1 [ˈsıəriəs US ˈsır ] adj ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(situation/problem)¦ 2 be serious 3¦(important)¦ 4¦(large amount)¦ 5¦(romantic relationship)¦ 6¦(person)¦ 7¦(sport/activity)¦ 8¦(very good)¦ 9¦(worried/unhappy)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [ …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • serious — se|ri|ous [ sıriəs ] adjective *** ▸ 1 bad enough to worry you ▸ 2 deserving attention ▸ 3 not joking ▸ 4 careful and detailed ▸ 5 not laughing much ▸ 6 involving difficult ideas ▸ 7 involving strong feelings ▸ 8 caring about activity ▸ 9… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • serious — adjective 1 SITUATION/PROBLEM a serious situation, problem, accident etc is extremely bad or dangerous: a serious illness | How serious do you think the situation is? | serious crime: The number of serious crimes has increased dramatically in the …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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