different between absurdity vs witlessness
absurdity
English
Etymology
First attested around 1472. From Middle English absurdite, then from either Middle French absurdité, or from Late Latin absurditas (“dissonance, incongruity”), from Latin absurdus +? -itas (“quality, state, degree”). Equivalent to absurd +? -ity.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?b?s??d.?.ti/
- (US) IPA(key): /æb?s?d.?.ti/, /æb?z?d.?.ti/, /?b?s?d.?.ti/, /?b?z?d.?.ti/
Noun
absurdity (countable and uncountable, plural absurdities)
- (countable) That which is absurd; an absurd action; a logical contradiction. [First attested in the late 15th century.]
- (uncountable) The quality of being absurd or inconsistent with obvious truth, reason, or sound judgment. [First attested in the early 16th century.]
- (obsolete, rare) Dissonance. [Attested from around 1350 to 1470 until the late 17th century.]
Translations
References
absurdity From the web:
- what absurdity means
- what absurdity means in spanish
- what absurdity in french
- absurdity what does this word mean
- absurdity what does that mean
- what is absurdity in literature
- what is absurdity in existentialism
- what is absurdity in philosophy
witlessness
English
Etymology
witless +? -ness
Noun
witlessness (usually uncountable, plural witlessnesses)
- The state of being witless; stupidity.
Anagrams
- witnessless
witlessness From the web:
- what does witlessness mean
- what does witlessness
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