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Improvised   /ˈɪmprəvˌaɪzd/   Listen
Improvised

adjective
1.
Done or made using whatever is available.  Synonyms: jury-rigged, makeshift.  "The survivors used jury-rigged fishing gear" , "The rock served as a makeshift hammer"



Improvise

verb
(past & past part. improvised; pres. part. improvising)
1.
Perform without preparation.  Synonyms: ad-lib, extemporise, extemporize, improvize.
2.
Manage in a makeshift way; do with whatever is at hand.  Synonym: extemporize.



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"Improvised" Quotes from Famous Books



... and herself from the clutch of Master Gregory. Two of her emissaries had encountered a farmer in Chancery Lane. They spoke with him first at Smithfield, and knew that his pocket was well lined with bank-notes. An improvised quarrel at a tavern-door threw the farmer off his guard, and though he defended the money, his watch was snatched from his fob and duly carried to Moll. The next day the victim, anxious to repurchase his watch, repaired to ...
— A Book of Scoundrels • Charles Whibley

... that evening, as before, on the poor veranda improvised outside our dining-room. The floor was of plaster, the balustrade of twisted branches; four posts supported a ...
— Atlantida • Pierre Benoit

... a bar he had improvised by the brook. A pool served the office of refrigerator, and Mr. Cooke had devised an ingenious but complicated arrangement of strings and labels which enabled him to extract any bottle or set of bottles without having to bare his arm and ...
— The Crossing • Winston Churchill

... 1894. Two years later W.A. Dickey and his partner, Monks, two young Princeton graduates, exploring north from their workings, recognized the mountain's commanding proportions and named it Mount McKinley, by which it rapidly became known, and was entered on the early maps. With crude instruments improvised on the spot, Dickey estimated the mountain's height as twenty thousand feet—a real achievement. When Belmore Browne, who climbed the great peak in 1912, asked Dickey why he chose the name, Dickey told him ...
— The Book of the National Parks • Robert Sterling Yard

... the army may be affirmed in even a more emphatic way of the navy. A modern navy can not be improvised. It must be built and in existence when the emergency arises which calls for its use and operation. My distinguished predecessor has in many speeches and messages set out with great force and striking language the necessity for maintaining a strong navy commensurate ...
— U.S. Presidential Inaugural Addresses • Various


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