0 having, or being likely to cause, a very close friendship or personal or sexual relationship: --
The restaurant has a very intimate atmosphere.
intimate relationships
1 (of knowledge or understanding) detailed, and obtained from a lot of studying or experience: --
3 to make clear what you think or want without saying it directly: --
[ + (that) ] She has intimated that she will resign if she loses the vote.
4 being a close, personal friend, or having a close, personal relationship: --
I don't like it at all, because love-making is perhaps the most intimate and personal thing imaginable.
Moreover, the decaying houses intimate the finite nature of our existence.
The former, more intimate and personal, on of hands, was the most popular therapy.
In the case of online diaries, publicizing the intimate meets two purposes, a social one and another, individual one.
In this context, musical relations are likely to become more self-conscious, and less intimate, than when watching fiction.
At every juncture there is a seamless connection between private moments and public events, intimate feelings and collective sentiments, personal goals and national ambitions.
At the same time, first-party privilege is provisionally accommodated and intimate harmony is protected in the face of such an unpleasant revelation.
A more intimate term is needed to describe the persons whose acts are attributed to the corporation.