WordDisk
  • Reading
    • Shortcuts
      •   Home
      •   All Articles
      •   Read from Another Site
      Sources
      • Wikipedia
      • Simple Wikipedia
      • VOA Learning English
      • Futurity
      • The Conversation
      • MIT News
      • Harvard Gazette
      • Cambridge News
      • YDS/YÖKDİL Passages
      Topics
      • Technology
      • Engineering
      • Business
      • Economics
      • Human
      • Health
      • Energy
      • Biology
      • Nature
      • Space
  •  Log in
  •  Sign up
4.37
History
Add

composed adjective [ kəmˈpəʊzd ]

• having one's feelings and expression under control; calm.
• "a very talented and composed young player"
Similar: calm, collected, cool, and collected, as cool as a cucumber, cool-headed, controlled, self-controlled, serene, tranquil, relaxed, at ease, self-possessed, unruffled, unperturbed, unflustered, undisturbed, unmoved, unbothered, untroubled, unagitated, equable, even-tempered, level-headed, imperturbable, unflappable, unfazed, together, laid-back, chilled, nonplussed, equanimous,
Opposite: excited, overwrought,

compose verb

• write or create (a work of art, especially music or poetry).
• "he composed the First Violin Sonata four years earlier"
Similar: write, create, devise, make up, think up, frame, formulate, fashion, produce, originate, invent, contrive, concoct, pen, author, draft, rhyme, sing, verse, indite,
• (of elements) constitute or make up (a whole, or a specified part of it).
• "the National Congress is composed of ten senators"
Similar: make up, constitute, form, comprise,
• calm or settle (oneself or one's features or thoughts).
• "she tried to compose herself"
Similar: calm down, settle down, control oneself, regain/recover one's composure, pull oneself together, get control of oneself, collect oneself, steady oneself, keep one's head, simmer down, get a grip, keep one's cool, keep one's shirt on, decompress, stay loose,
Opposite: get worked up,
• prepare (a text) for printing by manually, mechanically, or electronically setting up the letters and other characters in the order to be printed.
• "in offices where close-set text was composed both men and women pieceworkers were normally employed"
Origin: late Middle English (in the general sense ‘put together, construct’): from Old French composer, from Latin componere (see component), but influenced by Latin compositus ‘composed’ and Old French poser ‘to place’.


2025 WordDisk