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negative

/ˈnɛ(e)ɡəˌɾɪv/

Adjective[C/U] Both
pl: negatives

The word functions as a conceptual mirror to "positive," but its emotional weight varies wildly depending on context. In medical or technical settings, it is often a reliefmeaning the absence of a disease or problem. In social and psychological contexts, it carries a heavy negative connotation, describing a mindset of pessimism, cynicism, or a tendency to focus on failure rather than success. It suggests an energy that drains or discourages others. As a formal response, it is clinical and absolute. Unlike "no," which can be softened, a "negative" (especially in military or aviation radio speak) is a precise, binary indicator of refusal or absence.

Countable when referring to a physical piece of film used in photography or a specific 'no' answer in a conversation. Uncountable when discussing the general concept of negation in logic or grammar.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Late Tuesday afternoon, both Jessica and Sarah are working remotely, texting between virtual meetings.
Jessica

Did David manage to dump that extra brochure task on you after all?

Jessica
Sarah
Sarah

Negative. I ducked out before he could corner me.

💡
Jessica, the anxious project manager, is concerned about their manager, David, giving Sarah, the overworked designer, more tasks. Sarah uses 'negative' in a casual, almost military-style way to mean 'no' or 'mission aborted,' indicating she successfully avoided the extra work. 'Ducked out' is a phrasal verb meaning to quickly leave to avoid something or someone.

Meanings

Adjectiveabsent

Consisting in or characterized by the absence rather than the presence of something.

"The patient tested negative for the virus."

Adjectiverefusing

Expressing or implying denial, disagreement, or refusal.

"She gave a negative response to the proposal."

Adjectivepessimistic

Having a pessimistic or critical attitude; not positive.

"Stop being so negative about your chances of success."

Noundenial

A word or statement that expresses denial, refusal, or negation.

"The answer to the question was a definite negative."

Nounfilm image

A photographic image on film with the lightest areas appearing darkest.

"The photographer developed the negatives in a darkroom."

Collocations & Compounds

negative attitude

A way of thinking or behaving that is pessimistic, unhelpful, or critical.

Try to maintain a negative attitude towards challenges.

negative feedback

Criticism or comments about something that are intended to help improve it.

The manager provided constructive negative feedback on the report.

negative impact

A harmful or undesirable effect.

The construction project had a negative impact on local businesses.

negative number

A number less than zero.

The temperature dropped to a negative number overnight.

negative test

A test result that indicates the absence of a particular substance, condition, or organism.

The patient received a negative test result for the virus.

Idioms & Sayings

negative equity

The situation where the value of an asset, such as a house, is less than the amount owed on it.

Many homeowners found themselves in negative equity after the housing market crash.

negative reinforcement

In operant conditioning, the removal of an unpleasant stimulus to increase the probability of a behavior.

The trainer used negative reinforcement to stop the dog from jumping.

Etymology

The word 'negative' comes from the Latin word 'negativus', meaning 'denying' or 'that denies'. This itself derives from 'negare', which means 'to deny'. The word entered English in the mid-15th century, initially in a logical or philosophical sense, referring to a statement that denies something. Its usage later expanded to cover mathematical concepts (negative numbers), scientific measurements, and general expressions of denial or absence of a quality.

Related Words

Last Updated: June 8, 2026Report an Error