The Word is:”new”
new
adjective
adjective: new; comparative adjective: newer; superlative adjective: newest
1. produced, introduced, or discovered recently or now for the first time; not existing before.
“the new Madonna album”
synonyms: recently developed, newly discovered, brand new, up to the minute, up to date, latest,
current, state-of-the-art, contemporary, present-day, advanced, recent, modern; newly arrived, newborn
“Roger used new techniques of measuring and recording growth” novel, fresh, original, unhackneyed, imaginative, creative, experimental, new-fashioned, contemporary, modernist, up to date;
newfangled, modish, ultra-modern, avant-garde, futuristic;
informal way out, far out
“the committee is generally tolerant of new ideas”
“Roger used new techniques of measuring and recording growth”
newfangled, modish, ultra-modern, avant-garde, futuristic;
informal way out, far out
“the committee is generally tolerant of new ideas”
antonyms: old, existing, old-fashioned, stale, hackneyed
“a second-hand bus costs a fraction of a new one”
synonyms: unused, brand new, as new, pristine, fresh, mint, in mint condition
“you have to decide whether to buy your boat new or second-hand”
antonyms: second-hand, used
“a new baby”
“new potatoes”
2. already existing but seen, experienced, or acquired recently or now for the first time.
“her new bike”
“a way of living that was new to me”
“I’m quite new to gardening”
“I have a new assistant”
synonyms: different, another, alternative, changed, unfamiliar, unknown, strange, unaccustomed, untried
“new neighbours had recently moved in”
antonyms: present
“looking for new business”
synonyms: additional, added, extra, increased, more, supplementary, supplemental, further, another, fresh
“the school has just had a new classroom built”
antonyms: existing
adjective: New
“New York”
3. beginning a new and in a transformed way.
“starting a new life”
“a bottle of pills would make him a new man”
synonyms: reinvigorated, restored, revived, improved, refreshed, regenerated, reborn, renewed, remodelled
“I went into hospital feeling very poorly and came out a new woman”
“the new architecture”
“the New Bohemians”
adverb
adverb: new
1.newly; recently.
“new-mown hay”
Source credit: Google