different between acrimony vs roughness

acrimony

English

Etymology

From Middle French acrimonie, from Latin ?crim?nia (sharpness, pungency).

Pronunciation

Noun

acrimony (countable and uncountable, plural acrimonies)

  1. A sharp and bitter hatred.
    Her acrimony for her neighbors manifests itself with shouting and stomping.

Synonyms

  • animosity
  • bitterness
  • enmity
  • hatred
  • opposition

Antonyms

  • friendship
  • peace

Related terms

  • acrimonious

Translations

acrimony From the web:

  • what acrimony means
  • what's acrimony movie about
  • what's acrimony in spanish
  • acrimony what happened at the end
  • acrimony what happened to robert
  • what is acrimony movie all about
  • what do acrimony mean
  • what does acrimony movie teach


roughness

English

Etymology

rough +? -ness

Noun

roughness (countable and uncountable, plural roughnesses)

  1. The property of being rough, coarseness.
    The roughness of the road made me wonder if my car would fall apart.
  2. Something that is rough; a rough spot.
    • 2003, Klaus Bange, “Surfaces of Substrate Glasses”. In: Thin Films on Glass, Springer Science & Business Media, page 101:
      A variety of suitable methods for surface inspection are available to detect topographical defects induced by surface roughnesses such as scratches, digs, inclusions and spatters.
  3. (US) Roughage; coarse fodder.
    • 1855, Southern Cultivator (volume 13, page 258)
      With this latter implement, the corn stalk fodder, shucks, oats, hay and other "roughness" may be finely cut up []
  4. (Scotland) Abundance, especially of food.

Derived terms

Translations

roughness From the web:

  • what is meant by roughness
  • what is roughness map
  • what is roughness coefficient
  • what is roughness length
  • what is roughness height
  • what is roughness average
  • what is roughness and waviness
  • what causes roughness of the face
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