different between animated vs trenchant

animated

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?æn.?.me?.t?d/
  • Hyphenation: an?i?mated

Adjective

animated (comparative more animated, superlative most animated)

  1. Full of life or spirit; lively; vigorous; spritely.
  2. Endowed with life.
    • 1825, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Aids to Reflection
      Throughout animated Nature, of each characteristic Organ and Faculty there exists a preassurance, an instinctive and practical anticipation; and no preassurance common to a whole species does in any instance prove delusive.
  3. Composed of inanimate objects or drawings that appear to move thought the use of computer graphics or stop-action filming.

Synonyms

  • (full of life or spirit): brisk, dynamic, peppy; see also Thesaurus:active
  • (endowed with life): animate, living; see also Thesaurus:alive
  • (composed of objects/drawings that appear to move): claymated

Translations

Verb

animated

  1. simple past tense and past participle of animate

Anagrams

  • Mandaite, aminated, diamante, diamanté

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trenchant

English

Alternative forms

  • trenchaunt (obsolete)

Etymology

Borrowed into Middle English from Old French trenchant, the present participle of trenchier (to cut).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t??n??nt/

Adjective

trenchant (comparative more trenchant, superlative most trenchant)

  1. (obsolete) Fitted to trench or cut; gutting; sharp.
    • 1663, Samuel Butler, Hudibras, part 1, canto 1:
      The trenchant blade, Toledo trusty, / For want of fighting was grown rusty, / And ate into itself, for lack / Of somebody to hew and hack.
  2. (figuratively) Keen; biting; vigorously articulate and effective; severe.
    • 2011, Jay A. Gertzman, Bookleggers and Smuthounds: The Trade in Erotica, 1920-1940
      His trenchant criticisms of the Church's repression [] include a discussion of the considerable 1938 success of the fledgling NODL in getting magazines removed from various points of sale.

Translations


Middle French

Etymology

Old French trenchant.

Noun

trenchant m or f (plural trenchans)

  1. sharp

Descendants

  • French: tranchant

Old French

Adjective

trenchant m (oblique and nominative feminine singular trenchant or trenchante)

  1. sharp; razor sharp

Declension

Verb

trenchant

  1. present participle of trenchier

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