different between alert vs foxy

alert

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /??l??t/
  • (General American) enPR: ?-lûrt?, IPA(key): /??l?t/
  • Rhymes: -??(?)t
  • Hyphenation: a?lert

Etymology 1

From French alerte (alert), from the phrase à l'erte (on the watch), from Italian all'erta (to the height), from erta (lookout, tower).

Adjective

alert (comparative more alert, superlative most alert)

  1. Attentive; awake; on guard.
  2. (obsolete) brisk; nimble; moving with celerity.
    • I saw an alert young fellow that cocked his hat upon a friend of his who entered just at the same time with myself
Translations

Noun

alert (plural alerts)

  1. An alarm.
  2. A notification of higher importance than an advisory.
  3. (military) A state of readiness for potential combat.
    an airborne alert; ground alert
Translations

Etymology 2

Formed within English by conversion, from alert (adj). Compare French alerter.

Verb

alert (third-person singular simple present alerts, present participle alerting, simple past and past participle alerted)

  1. To give warning to.
Translations

References

Anagrams

  • alter, alter-, altre, artel, later, ratel, taler, telar

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from French alerte.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a??l?rt/
  • Hyphenation: alert
  • Rhymes: -?rt

Adjective

alert (comparative alerter, superlative alertst)

  1. alert

Inflection

Derived terms

  • alertheid

Anagrams

  • later, ratel

German

Etymology

From French alerte.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [a?l??t]

Adjective

alert (comparative alerter, superlative am alertesten)

  1. alert

Declension

Further reading

  • “alert” in Duden online

Romanian

Etymology

From French alerte

Adjective

alert m or n (feminine singular alert?, masculine plural aler?i, feminine and neuter plural alerte)

  1. wide-awake

Declension


Swedish

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a?læ?/
  • Rhymes: -æ??

Adjective

alert (comparative alertare, superlative alertast)

  1. alert

Declension

Anagrams

  • artel, later, letar, realt

alert From the web:

  • what alert just went off
  • what alerts trigger fcra requirements
  • what alerts the brain to incoming signals
  • what alerts are there
  • what alert means
  • what alerts instructors to the possibility of plagiarism
  • what alert level is south africa
  • what alert level is the united states


foxy

English

Etymology

From fox +? -y.

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?f?ksi/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?f?ksi/
  • Rhymes: -?ksi
  • Hyphenation: fox?y

Adjective

foxy (comparative foxier, superlative foxiest)

  1. Having the qualities of a fox.
  2. Cunning, sly.
  3. Attractive, sexy (of a woman).
  4. (of a person, especially a woman) Reddish-brown haired.
  5. (art) Using too much of the reddish-brown colours.
    • 1844, Benjamin Robert Haydon, Lectures on Painting and Design:
      His eye for colour was so exquisite that I do not think there is a single instance in all his works of a heated tint which is called foxy. This cannot be said of Rubens or Rembrandt []
    • 1870, Frederick Peter Seguier, A Critical and Commercial Dictionary of the Works of Painters:
      Although the skies of Brydael's pictures are often broken with rather heavy masses of orange and yellow clouds, yet, taking him altogether, he was not a 'foxy' painter; on the contrary, there is a silvery coolness about some of his pictures which pleases us.
  6. (of wine) Having an animal-like odour.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:sexy

Translations

foxy From the web:

  • what foxy means
  • what foxy looks like
  • what foxes eat
  • what foxes eat in minecraft
  • what foxes are endangered
  • what foxes look like
  • what foxes live in the desert
  • what foxes do
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