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essence

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UK:**UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/ˈɛsəns/US:USA pronunciation: IPA and respellingUSA pronunciation: IPA/ˈɛsəns/ ,USA pronunciation: respelling(esəns)


WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
es•sence /ˈɛsəns/USA pronunciation   n. 
  1. the basic, unchanging nature of a thing;
    the substance that gives something identity:[uncountable]The essence of civilized behavior is courtesy.
  2. the basic meaning of something;
    main point:[uncountable]The essence of his speech was that we must all work harder.
  3. a concentrated substance made from a plant, drug, or the like:[countable* uncountable]essence of brandy.
Idioms
  1. Idioms in essence, essentially;
    basically:What she said, in essence, is that all will be well.
  2. Idioms of the essence, absolutely essential;
    crucial:It is of the essence that you attend that meeting.


WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
es•sence  (esəns),USA pronunciation n. 
  1. the basic, real, and invariable nature of a thing or its significant individual feature or features:Freedom is the very essence of our democracy.
  2. a substance obtained from a plant, drug, or the like, by distillation, infusion, etc., and containing its characteristic properties in concentrated form.
  3. an alcoholic solution of an essential oil;
    spirit.
  4. a perfume;
    scent.
  5. [Philos.]the inward nature, true substance, or constitution of anything, as opposed to what is accidental, phenomenal, illusory, etc.
  6. something that exists, esp. a spiritual or immaterial entity.
  7. Idioms in essence, essentially;
    at bottom, often despite appearances:For all his bluster, he is in essence a shy person.
  8. Idioms of the essence, absolutely essential;
    critical;
    crucial:In chess, cool nerves are of the essence.
  • Medieval Latin, for Latin essentia. See esse, -ence
  • Middle English essencia 1350–1400
    1. substance, spirit, lifeblood, heart, principle, soul, core.

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
essence /ˈɛsəns/ n
  1. the characteristic or intrinsic feature of a thing, which determines its identity; fundamental nature
  2. a perfect or complete form of something, esp a person who typifies an abstract quality
  3. the unchanging and unchangeable nature of something which is necessary to its being the thing it is; its necessary properties
    • the constituent of a plant, usually an oil, alkaloid, or glycoside, that determines its chemical or pharmacological properties
    • an alcoholic solution of such a substance
  4. a substance, usually a liquid, containing the properties of a plant or foodstuff in concentrated form: vanilla essence
  5. in essenceessentially; fundamentally
  6. of the essenceindispensable; vitally important
Etymology: 14th Century: from Medieval Latin essentia, from Latin: the being (of something), from esse to be
'essence' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
Collocations: [human, spiritual, pure] essence, the essence of the [speech, book, story], the [book's, story's, movie's] essence is lost, more...

🗣️Forum discussions with the word(s) "essence" in the title:

a ladle of steel – the very essence of metal. [use dash "–"]
as her specialization in the ethics of reciprocation would later -when she indeed did dedicate her oeuvre, in essence, to ‘the rational...
At its essence
become imbued with <our essence>
being reduced to a bodily essence in abject fluids
capture the essence
concerns the very essence of human life
delivery of the concentrated essence
distil a sentence into its essence
distillate / essence
Distilled to the essence
draw essence from
efficiency is of the essence
Essence game
essence or nature
essence which implies
essence, quintessence, of Englishness as she understood it
essence/axis
extract the <extract><essence>
In essence / In its essence
in fact vs. in essence
judge anything's essence by first observations
of the essence for/to making…
shall be the essence of the Contract
singular or plural: the essence of both are/is the same
substance/essence of the verdict
subsumed the very essence
taking it in its essence
the essence comes back
The <essence> is ...
more...

Look up "essence" at Merriam-Webster
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