Neat

Noun

 * 1)  A bull or cow (singular of cattle)
 * 2) (collective) Cattle.

Plastering

1. Unsanded gypsum plaster

Derived terms

 * neatherd

Adjective

 * 1) Clean, tidy; free from dirt or impurities.
 * 2) Free from contaminants; unadulterated, undiluted. Particularly of liquor and cocktails; see usage below.
 * I like my whisky neat.
 * 1) (Chemistry) Conditions with a liquid reagent or gas performed with no standard solvent or cosolvent
 * The Arbuzov reaction is performed by adding the bromide to the phosphite, neat.
 * The molecular beam was neat acetylene.
 * 1)  With all deductions or allowances made; net.
 * 2) Having a simple elegance or style; clean, trim, tidy, tasteful.
 * The front room was neat and carefully arranged for the guests.
 * 1) Well-executed or delivered; clever, skilful, precise.
 * Having the two protagonists meet in the last act was a particularly neat touch.
 * 1)  Good, excellent, desirable.
 * Hey, neat convertible, man.

Coordinate terms

 * straight up, up, straight

Antonyms

 * on the rocks

Thesaurus
Attic, Ciceronian, Daedalian, OK, Spartan, absolute, ace-high, adept, adroit, all ataunto, anal, apt, artistic, ascetic, ataunt, austere, authoritative, bad, bald, bang-up, bare, bonzer, boss, bravura, braw, brilliant, bully, bungup and bilge-free, but good, calligraphic, candid, capital, chaste, chic, chipper, clarified, classic, classy, clean, clean-cut, clear, clever, clothes-conscious, comely, common, commonplace, cool, coordinated, copperplate, corking, cosmopolitan, crack, crackerjack, cunning, cute, daedal, dandy, dapper, dashing, deft, delicious, dexterous, dextrous, dinky, diplomatic, direct, distilled, dressed to advantage, dressed to kill, dry, ducky, dull, easy, efficient, elegant, excellent, exceptional, expert, exquisite, fab, fancy, fastidious, fine, fine and dandy, finished, first-class, frank, gear, genteel, good, goodish, graceful, gracile, grand, great, groovy, handy, heavy, homely, homespun, hot, hunky-dory, ingenious, jam-up, jaunty, just dandy, keen, lean, limpid, lucid, magisterial, marvy, masterful, masterly, matter-of-fact, mean, naked, natty, natural, nifty, no mean, nobby, okay, on the rocks, open, orderly, organized, out of sight, peachy, peachy-keen, pellucid, perspicuous, plain, plain-speaking, plain-spoken, polished, politic, posh, precise, prim, professional, proficient, prosaic, prosing, prosy, pure, purified, quick, quite some, ready, recherche, rectified, refined, regular, resourceful, restrained, ripping, ritzy, round, rum, rustic, scrumptious, severe, shapely, sharp, sheer, shipshape, simple, simple-speaking, skillful, slap-up, sleek, slick, smart, smashing, smug, snazzy, snug, sober, soigne, soignee, solid, some, something else, sophisticated, spare, spick and span, spiffing, spiffy, splendid, spruce, stark, statesmanlike, straight, straightforward, stunning, style-conscious, stylish, super, swank, swanky, swell, systematic, tactful, tasteful, taut, terse, the compleat, the complete, tidy, tight, top-hole, top-notch, topping, tough, tricksy, trig, trim, unadorned, unadulterated, unaffected, unalloyed, unblended, uncluttered, uncombined, uncomplicated, uncompounded, uncorrupted, uncut, undiluted, unembellished, unfortified, unimaginative, unlabored, unleavened, unmingled, unmixed, unornamented, unpoetical, unsophisticated, untinged, unvarnished, virtuoso, well-cared-for, well-done, well-dressed, well-favored, well-formed, well-groomed, well-made, well-ordered, well-proportioned, well-shaped, wizard, wonderful, workmanlike

Etymology 1
neat:. Cognate with Dutch noot:, dialectal German Noß:, Swiss German Nooss:, Swedish nöt:.

Etymology 2
From net: (Modern  net:), from  nitidus:, from niteo:.

Noun

 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German: Hornvieh; Rindvieh


 * Hebrew: שור (shor), בקר (baqar)
 * Portuguese:

Adjective

 * Arabic:
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish:
 * Italian:
 * Kurdish:


 * Portuguese: ,
 * Russian:
 * Scots:
 * Spanish:


 * Greek: σκέτος


 * Chinese: 平整 (píngzhěng)
 * Finnish: ,


 * Hungarian:
 * Spanish:


 * Arabic:
 * Chinese: 整齐 (zhěngqí)
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish:
 * French: ,
 * German:, ,
 * Hungarian:
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: きちんとした (kichínto shitá)


 * Korean: 단정한 (danjeonghan)
 * Norwegian: ryddig
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian:
 * Scots:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: prydlig
 * Turkish:

Anagrams

 * ante
 * Etna
 * Nate

Noun

 * 1) cow, ox; animal

Etymology
From. Cognate with Old Frisian nāt, Old Saxon nōt (Dutch noot), Old High German nōz (dialectal German Nos), Old Norse naut.

Descendants

 * English: neat

Pronoun
neat


 * 1) nothing

Etymology
Negative form of eat