detail
verb/ˈdiːteɪl/
/ˈdiːteɪl/, /dɪˈteɪl/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they detail | /ˈdiːteɪl/ /ˈdiːteɪl/, /dɪˈteɪl/ |
| he / she / it details | /ˈdiːteɪlz/ /ˈdiːteɪlz/, /dɪˈteɪlz/ |
| past simple detailed | /ˈdiːteɪld/ /ˈdiːteɪld/, /dɪˈteɪld/ |
| past participle detailed | /ˈdiːteɪld/ /ˈdiːteɪld/, /dɪˈteɪld/ |
| -ing form detailing | /ˈdiːteɪlɪŋ/ /ˈdiːteɪlɪŋ/, /dɪˈteɪlɪŋ/ |
- detail something to give a list of facts or all the available information about something
- The brochure details all the hotels in the area and their facilities.
- In this lecture, I will detail the history of television from the beginning.
- to detail your experiences/plans/activities
- Of the factors detailed above, supply and demand are the primary forces behind interest rate levels.
Want to learn more?
Find out which words work together and produce more natural sounding English with the Oxford Collocations Dictionary app.
- [often passive] to give an official order to somebody, especially a soldier, to do a particular task
- be detailed (to do something) Several of the men were detailed to form a search party.
- detail something (North American English) to clean a car carefully and completely
- He got work for a while detailing cars.
give facts/information
order soldier
clean car
Word Originearly 17th cent. (in the sense ‘minor items or events regarded collectively’): from French détail (noun), détailler (verb), from dé- (expressing separation) + tailler ‘to cut’ (based on Latin talea ‘twig, cutting’).
Check pronunciation:
detail