B1 Adjective / Verb (Past Participle) #45 الأكثر شيوعاً 3 دقيقة للقراءة

aimed

Aimed means that something was pointed or directed toward a specific target or goal.

Explanation at your level:

If you want to hit a target, you point at it. We say you aimed at the target. You can aim a ball, a toy, or a camera. It means you are looking at where you want something to go.

When you have a goal, you can say your work is aimed at that goal. For example, 'This book is aimed at students.' It means the book is made for them to read and learn from.

The word aimed is very common when talking about plans or products. If a company makes a product, they have a specific group of people in mind. We say the product is aimed at that group. It shows clear intention and planning.

In professional settings, aimed is used to describe the purpose of policies or campaigns. It implies a strategic decision. You might hear, 'The new tax law is aimed at reducing waste.' This shows that the action was taken with a specific outcome in mind.

At an advanced level, aimed can be used in more figurative senses. You might say someone's comments were aimed at undermining a colleague. This usage suggests a calculated, perhaps subtle, intent. It moves beyond simple physical direction into the realm of social and psychological maneuvering.

Mastery of aimed involves understanding its etymological connection to 'estimation'. In literary contexts, it can describe a character's internal focus or their 'aim' in life. It reflects a state of being purposeful. It is a precise word that cuts through ambiguity, signaling exactly where the focus lies in any given situation.

الكلمة في 30 ثانية

  • Aimed means to point or direct with intent.
  • It is almost always followed by the preposition 'at'.
  • It works for physical objects and abstract goals.
  • It is a neutral, highly useful word in English.

When you use the word aimed, you are talking about intent. Think of a dart player standing at the board; they have aimed their dart at the center bullseye. It is all about focus and direction.

Beyond physical objects, we use aimed for abstract goals. If a company creates a new toy, it is aimed at children. This means the design, the colors, and the marketing are all tailored to appeal to that specific audience.

Essentially, whenever you see or use this word, ask yourself: 'What is the target?' Whether it is a physical arrow or a complex business strategy, the core idea remains the same: deliberate focus.

The word aimed comes from the Middle English word aimen, which traces back to the Old French aesmer. Interestingly, this root word meant 'to estimate' or 'to judge'.

In the 14th century, the meaning evolved from simply 'estimating' to 'directing one's course' or 'pointing a weapon'. It is fascinating how we went from 'judging the distance' to 'pointing at the target'.

It shares linguistic roots with the concept of 'estimation'. When you aim a gun or a camera, you are essentially making a quick judgment call about where the object needs to be pointed to hit the mark.

You will hear aimed used constantly in professional and casual settings. It is almost always followed by the preposition at. For example, 'The speech was aimed at the youth.'

In formal contexts, it is used to describe policy or strategic intent. In casual conversation, it is used for physical actions like 'I aimed the remote at the TV.' It is a versatile word that fits almost any register.

Common collocations include aimed at, specifically aimed, and poorly aimed. It is a neutral word that carries no inherent positive or negative connotation—it just describes the act of focusing.

While 'aimed' itself is a verb form, it anchors several key expressions. Take aim at means to criticize or attack someone. Aim high encourages people to set ambitious goals. Aim to please means you are trying your best to make someone happy. Aim for the stars is a classic idiom for setting very high goals. Aimless is the opposite, describing someone who has no direction.

The word aimed is a one-syllable word. Despite the 'ed' ending, we do not add a syllable; it is pronounced as /eɪmd/. It rhymes with tamed, famed, blamed, claimed, and named.

Grammatically, it functions as the past tense or past participle of the verb 'aim'. It is frequently used in the passive voice, such as 'The project was aimed at increasing sales.' Always remember the preposition at, as it is the most common partner for this word.

Fun Fact

It used to mean 'to guess the distance' before it meant 'to point'.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /eɪmd/

Sounds like 'tamed'.

US /eɪmd/

Sounds like 'famed'.

Common Errors

  • pronouncing the 'ed' as a separate syllable
  • swallowing the 'd' sound
  • mispronouncing the 'ai' dipthong

Rhymes With

tamed famed blamed claimed named

Difficulty Rating

القراءة 2/5

easy

Writing 2/5

easy

Speaking 2/5

easy

الاستماع 2/5

easy

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

goal point target

Learn Next

intention strategy objective

متقدم

deliberate calculated

Grammar to Know

Passive Voice

It was aimed at...

Prepositional Phrases

Aimed at the target

Verb Tenses

He aimed, he is aiming

Examples by Level

1

I aimed the ball at the basket.

I pointed the ball toward the hoop.

Verb + noun + at + noun.

2

He aimed the camera.

He pointed the camera.

Simple past.

3

She aimed well.

She pointed correctly.

Adverb usage.

4

The toy is aimed at kids.

The toy is for kids.

Passive voice.

5

I aimed for the wall.

I pointed toward the wall.

Aimed + for.

6

They aimed the light.

They directed the light.

Transitive verb.

7

The dog aimed at the cat.

The dog looked at the cat.

Aimed + at.

8

I aimed my pen.

I pointed my pen.

Simple past.

1

The movie is aimed at teenagers.

2

He aimed his car into the garage.

3

The plan is aimed at saving money.

4

She aimed her questions at the teacher.

5

We aimed for the finish line.

6

The study is aimed at finding a cure.

7

They aimed the remote at the TV.

8

He aimed his words carefully.

1

The campaign is aimed at raising awareness.

2

She aimed to finish the report by noon.

3

The criticism was aimed at the management.

4

He aimed his arrow at the center.

5

The policy is aimed at helping the poor.

6

They aimed for a higher score.

7

The message was aimed at the public.

8

He aimed his gaze at the horizon.

1

The reforms are specifically aimed at transparency.

2

He aimed his remarks at the skeptics in the room.

3

The project is aimed at long-term sustainability.

4

She felt the comment was aimed at her.

5

They aimed for a consensus among the board.

6

The advertisement is aimed at luxury consumers.

7

He aimed his efforts at solving the crisis.

8

The law is aimed at protecting privacy.

1

The subtle irony was aimed at the pretentiousness of the crowd.

2

His entire career has been aimed at achieving this specific breakthrough.

3

The legislation is aimed at curbing corporate excess.

4

She aimed her critique at the very foundation of the theory.

5

The speech was artfully aimed at swaying the undecided voters.

6

The research is aimed at uncovering hidden patterns.

7

The policy, while well-intentioned, was poorly aimed.

8

He aimed his ambition at the highest office in the land.

1

The narrative is aimed at deconstructing traditional tropes.

2

His life's work was aimed at the synthesis of art and science.

3

The subtle jab was aimed at her professional integrity.

4

The strategy was aimed at exploiting market inefficiencies.

5

The discourse is aimed at a highly specialized audience.

6

The initiative is aimed at fostering cross-cultural dialogue.

7

The project was aimed at the preservation of local heritage.

8

The argument was aimed at the core of the philosophical debate.

تلازمات شائعة

aimed at
specifically aimed
poorly aimed
aimed to
aimed for
carefully aimed
clearly aimed
aimed directly
aimed solely
aimed primarily

Idioms & Expressions

"take aim at"

to criticize or attack

The press took aim at the senator.

neutral

"aim high"

to set big goals

Always aim high in your career.

casual

"aim to please"

wanting to make others happy

I always aim to please my guests.

neutral

"aim for the stars"

to have huge ambitions

Don't settle; aim for the stars.

casual

"off the mark"

inaccurate

His guess was way off the mark.

neutral

"on target"

accurate or on schedule

The project is right on target.

neutral

Easily Confused

aimed vs pointed

similar physical meaning

pointed is purely physical; aimed implies intent

He pointed at the map vs He aimed the gun.

aimed vs directed

similar meaning

directed is broader

The movie was directed by him.

aimed vs targeted

similar meaning

targeted is more strategic

The ad was targeted.

aimed vs oriented

similar meaning

oriented implies alignment

The house is south-oriented.

Sentence Patterns

A1

Subject + aimed + at + object

He aimed at the target.

B1

Subject + aimed + to + verb

She aimed to succeed.

A2

Object + was + aimed + at + object

The ad was aimed at kids.

B2

Subject + carefully + aimed + at + object

He carefully aimed at the mark.

B1

Subject + aimed + for + goal

They aimed for the top.

عائلة الكلمة

Nouns

aim a goal or purpose

Verbs

aim to point or target

Adjectives

aimless without purpose

مرتبط

target synonym for the object of the aim

How to Use It

frequency

8/10

Formality Scale

formal neutral casual

أخطاء شائعة

aimed to [noun] aimed at [noun]
Aimed usually takes 'at' when followed by a noun.
aimed for [person] aimed at [person]
We aim at people, not for them.
aiming to [noun] aiming at [noun]
Same as above; check the preposition.
using 'aimed' without a target add a target
Aimed is transitive; it needs an object.
confusing aimed with 'amed' aimed
Spelling error.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace Trick

Visualize an arrow hitting a bullseye to fix the meaning.

💡

When Native Speakers Use It

We use it for plans and physical direction.

🌍

Cultural Insight

It is often used in political discourse.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Always check for 'at' after 'aimed'.

💡

Say It Right

Don't add a syllable to the 'ed' ending.

💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Don't forget the 'd' at the end.

💡

Did You Know?

It used to mean 'to estimate'.

💡

Study Smart

Practice with 'aimed at' + [noun].

💡

Writing Tip

Use it to show clear purpose.

💡

Speaking Tip

Use it to explain your goals.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

AIM: Always Intend Meaning.

Visual Association

An archer focusing on a red bullseye.

Word Web

goal target intention direction focus

تحدٍّ

Write three sentences using 'aimed at' today.

أصل الكلمة

Old French / Middle English

Original meaning: to estimate or judge

السياق الثقافي

None, it is a standard neutral verb.

Used frequently in sports, business, and daily life.

'Aim for the stars' is a very common motivational phrase in US culture.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

at work

  • aimed at results
  • aimed at efficiency
  • aimed at growth

in sports

  • aimed the ball
  • aimed the shot
  • aimed for the goal

in marketing

  • aimed at customers
  • aimed at the market
  • aimed at sales

in daily life

  • aimed the remote
  • aimed the camera
  • aimed for the door

Conversation Starters

"What is your career aimed at achieving?"

"Do you think this movie is aimed at adults or kids?"

"Have you ever aimed for something and missed?"

"How do you aim your efforts when you are busy?"

"Is your study routine aimed at efficiency?"

Journal Prompts

Describe a time you aimed for a goal.

What is your current project aimed at?

Reflect on a time you felt aimless.

Write about a product aimed at your age group.

الأسئلة الشائعة

8 أسئلة

Usually, yes, especially when describing a target.

Yes, if you are directing comments or actions toward them.

It is neutral and works in all settings.

Aim is the present tense; aimed is the past.

Yes, when followed by a verb (e.g., 'I aimed to win').

Yes, very.

No, it rhymes with 'tamed'.

Absolutely, it is very common in business.

اختبر نفسك

fill blank A1

He ___ the ball at the net.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: aimed

Aimed is the correct verb for pointing.

multiple choice A2

Which preposition follows 'aimed'?

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: at

Aimed at is the standard collocation.

true false B1

Can you be 'aimless' if you have a goal?

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: خطأ

Aimless means without a goal.

match pairs B1

Word

المعنى

All matched!

Understanding common idioms.

sentence order B2

انقر على الكلمات أدناه لبناء الجملة
صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة:

Subject + verb + preposition + object.

fill blank B2

The policy is ___ at reducing taxes.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: aimed

Aimed fits the context of policy.

true false C1

Is 'aimed' a synonym for 'random'?

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: خطأ

Aimed implies intent, random implies lack thereof.

multiple choice C1

What does 'take aim at' mean?

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: 2

It means to criticize.

sentence order C2

انقر على الكلمات أدناه لبناء الجملة
صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة:

Formal sentence structure.

fill blank C2

His remarks were ___ at the core of the issue.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: aimed

Aimed is the most precise word.

النتيجة: /10

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