different between afraid vs livered

afraid

English

Etymology

From Middle English affrayed, affraied, past participle of afraien (to affray), from Anglo-Norman afrayer (to terrify, disquiet, disturb), from Old French effreer, esfreer (to disturb, remove the peace from), from es- (out) +? freer (to secure, secure the peace), from Frankish *friþu (security, peace), from Proto-Germanic *friþuz (peace), from Proto-Germanic *frij?n? (to free; to love), from Proto-Indo-European *pr?y-, *pr?y- (to like, love). Synchronically analyzable as affray +? -ed. Compare also afeard. More at free, friend.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??f?e?d/
  • Rhymes: -e?d

Adjective

afraid (comparative more afraid, superlative most afraid)

  1. (usually used predicatively, not attributively, be afraid) Impressed with fear or apprehension; in fear.
    Synonyms: afeared, alarmed, anxious, apprehensive, fearful, timid, timorous; see also Thesaurus:afraid
  2. (colloquial) Regretful, sorry.
    Synonym: sorry
  3. (used with for) Worried about, feeling concern for, fearing for (someone or something).

Usage notes

  • Afraid expresses a lesser degree of fear than terrified or frightened. It is often followed by the preposition of and the object of fear, or by an infinitive, or by a dependent clause, as shown in the examples above.

Derived terms

Related terms

  • afear
  • afeared
  • affray
  • fray

Translations

See also

  • fear

Welsh

Etymology

af- (un-) +? rhaid (necessity)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?avrai?d/

Adjective

afraid (feminine singular afraid, plural afraid, equative afreidied, comparative afreidiach, superlative afreidiaf)

  1. unnecessary, unessential
    • c. 1500, Ieuan Tew, poem in Cwrt Mawr manuscript no. 5, published and translated 1921 by T. Gwynn Jones, “Cultural Bases. A Study of the Tudor Period in Wales”, Y Cymmrodor. The Magazine of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, vol. 31, page 182:
      mogelwch yma golyn
      a fo goeg, ag afu gwyn—
      a choegddyn crin, ledryn crach,
      o fradwr—nid afreidiach;
      beware of the sting of white-livered wretches, and every withered, niggardly wretch of a traitor—it were not less necessary;
    • c. 1600, Edmwnd Prys, quoted in A Welsh Grammar, Historical and Comparative by J. Morris Jones, Oxford: 1913, p. 44:
      Amlwg fydd tr?yn a’r wyneb;
      Afraid i ni nodi neb.
      Plain is the nose on a face; it is unnecessary for us to mention anyone.

Noun

afraid m (plural afreidiau)

  1. superfluity, extravagance

Mutation

Further reading

  • R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke et al., editors (1950–present) , “afraid”, in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies

afraid From the web:

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  • what's afraid in french
  • what's afraid of the dark
  • what's afraid in german
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livered

English

Etymology

liver +? -ed

Adjective

livered (not comparable)

  1. (in combination) Having (or having the characteristics associated with) a specified form of liver

Anagrams

  • deliver, delivre, relived, reviled

livered From the web:

  • what does livered mean
  • levered firm
  • what lily livered mean
  • what milk-livered mean
  • what lily-livered
  • what's white-livered mean
  • what does lily livered mean
  • what does pigeon livered mean
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