Thesaurus Dictionary
Synonyms and antonyms of Words used to describe thoughts, beliefs and ideas in American Thesaurus
Words used to describe thoughts, beliefs and ideas
theoretical (adjective)
based on theories or ideas instead of on practical experience
conceptual (adjective)
relating to ideas and principles
utopian (adjective)
utopian principles or beliefs are based on the idea that life can be perfect. This is often used for saying that something is not practical or sensible
anthropocentric (adjective)
considering that people are more important than anything else in the world
be bound up in/with something ()
ideas, feelings, or issues that are bound up with each other are connected very closely, so that it is difficult to think of them separately
compatible (adjective)
ideas or systems that are compatible can exist together
contagious (adjective)
a contagious feeling or idea spreads quickly from one person or place to another
contradictory (adjective)
contradictory statements, information, ideas, or beliefs disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true
defensible (adjective)
a defensible belief or idea is one that you can support well against criticism
discretionary (adjective)
based on someone’s judgment of a particular situation rather than on a set of rules
experiential (adjective)
very formal relating to or based on experience
half-baked (adjective)
informal a half-baked idea or plan is not practical because it has not been thought about carefully
ideological (adjective)
based on, or relating to, an ideology
if someone is in your thoughts, you think about them a lot. This expression is often used for telling someone who is unhappy that you are thinking about them
thinking about something only as a general idea without referring to real situations or practical experience
introspective (adjective)
tending to examine your own feelings, thoughts, or ideas instead of communicating with other people
mechanistic (adjective)
treating or describing human behavior and natural processes as if they are machines
muddle-headed (adjective)
optimistic (adjective)
positivist (adjective)
preconceived (adjective)
a preconceived idea or opinion is formed before you have a lot of information, experience, or evidence and is therefore probably wrong
revisionist (adjective)
revisionist ideas are different from the ideas that a group has officially or traditionally accepted. This word often shows that you think the new ideas are wrong
simplistic (adjective)
treating something in a way that makes it seem much simpler than it really is
strict (adjective)
completely following the rules of a particular belief
subjective (adjective)
used about a person’s feelings and thoughts that no one else can know directly or completely
technical (adjective)
based on a strict way of understanding or explaining a law or rule
technically (adverb)
according to a strict way of understanding the meaning of a rule or a set of facts
theoretical (adjective)
thoughtful (adjective)
thoughtfully (adverb)
in a way that shows you are thinking seriously about something
thought-out (adjective)
considered in every aspect
threadbare (adjective)
a threadbare idea or excuse has been used a lot and is not effective anymore
uncontroversial (adjective)
if an idea, statement, or situation is uncontroversial, the majority of people accept that it is right
utilitarian (adjective)
utilitarian attitudes or principles are based on the belief that something is morally right if it helps a majority of people
warmed-over (adjective)
American warmed-over ideas or arguments are not new or original
with someone/something in mind ()
while thinking about someone or something