impress
verb /ɪmˈpres/
/ɪmˈpres/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they impress | /ɪmˈpres/ /ɪmˈpres/ |
he / she / it impresses | /ɪmˈpresɪz/ /ɪmˈpresɪz/ |
past simple impressed | /ɪmˈprest/ /ɪmˈprest/ |
past participle impressed | /ɪmˈprest/ /ɪmˈprest/ |
-ing form impressing | /ɪmˈpresɪŋ/ /ɪmˈpresɪŋ/ |
- impress (somebody) We interviewed a number of candidates but none of them impressed us.
- The Grand Canyon never fails to impress people.
- The Grand Canyon never fails to impress.
- His sincerity impressed her.
- impress somebody with something He impressed her with his sincerity.
- it impresses somebody that… It impressed me that she remembered my name.
Extra Examples- I was young and easily impressed.
- This game is his big chance to impress.
- She impressed us with both the depth and range of her knowledge.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- really
- be determined to
- be keen to
- hope to
- …
- with
- an attempt to impress somebody
- an effort to impress somebody
- be easily impressed
- …
- [transitive] impress something on/upon somebody (formal) to make somebody understand how important, serious, etc. something is by emphasizing it
- He impressed on us the need for immediate action.
- Their responsibilities are impressed on them during training.
- [transitive] impress something/itself on/upon something (formal) to have a great effect on something, especially somebody’s mind, imagination, etc.
- Her words impressed themselves on my memory.
Word Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘apply with pressure’): from Old French empresser, from em- ‘in’ + presser ‘to press’, influenced by Latin imprimere, from in- ‘into’ + premere ‘to press’. Sense (1) dates from the mid 18th cent.