TOP

Definition of immune adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

immune

adjective
 
/ɪˈmjuːn/
 
/ɪˈmjuːn/
[not usually before noun]
jump to other results
  1. immune (to something) that cannot catch or be affected by a particular disease or illness
    • Adults are often immune to German measles.
    Extra Examples
    • Many people are immune to this disease.
    • The vaccination doesn't necessarily make you completely immune.
    Topics Health and Fitnessb2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • be
    • seem
    • become
    adverb
    • completely
    • totally
    preposition
    • to
    See full entry
  2. immune (to something) not affected by something, especially something that you might expect to be harmful
    • You'll eventually become immune to criticism.
    • Few people are immune to her charms.
    • Our business is far from immune to economic conditions.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • appear
    • be
    • prove
    adverb
    • completely
    • entirely
    • totally
    preposition
    • from
    • to
    See full entry
  3. immune (from something) protected from something and therefore able to avoid it synonym exempt
    • No one should be immune from prosecution.
    • Not even the monarch was immune from criticism by the press.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • appear
    • be
    • prove
    adverb
    • completely
    • entirely
    • totally
    preposition
    • from
    • to
    See full entry
  4. Word Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘free from (a liability)’): from Latin immunis ‘exempt from public service or charge’, from in- ‘not’ + munis ‘ready for service’. Sense 1 dates from the late 19th cent.
See immune in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee immune in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
dizzy
adjective
 
 
From the Topic
Health problems
C1
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day