| adrift | aimless, without direction, without purpose; (Nautical) drifting, not anchored (of a ship); astray | (sıfat) | en |
| adrift | without direction, without purpose; (Nautical) drifting, not anchored (of a ship) | en |
| adrift | If a boat is adrift, it is floating on the water and is not tied to anything or controlled by anyone. They were spotted after three hours adrift in a dinghy | en |
| adrift | If someone is adrift, they feel alone with no clear idea of what they should do. Amy had the growing sense that she was adrift and isolated | en |
| adrift | If something comes adrift, it is no longer attached to an object that it should be part of. Three insulating panels had come adrift from the base of the vehicle. = loose | en |
| adrift | off course; "there was a search for beauty that had somehow gone adrift | en |
| adrift | Also fig | en |
| adrift | Floating at random; in a drifting condition; at the mercy of wind and waves | en |
| Adrift | off course; "there was a search for beauty that had somehow gone adrift" | en |
| Adrift | aimlessly drifting | en |
| Adrift | afloat on the surface of a body of water; "after the storm the boats were adrift" | en |
| Adrift | Unattached to shore or bottom, floating out of control | en |
| Adrift | Floating at random under no power or steerage | en |
| Adrift | Floating at random; not fastened by and kind of mooring; at the mercy of winds and currents; loose from normal anchorage A vessel is said to be adrift when she breaks away from her moorings, warfs, and so on | en |
| Adrift | 1 lack of goal, 2 lack of spiritual direction,3 emotional self needs attention | en |
| Adrift | Afloat without effective means of propulsion or control | en |
| Adrift | Floating free with the currents and tide, not under control | en |