different between annoyed vs livid
annoyed
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /??n??d/
- Rhymes: -??d
Verb
annoyed
- simple past tense and past participle of annoy
Adjective
annoyed (comparative more annoyed, superlative most annoyed)
- Troubled, irritated by something unwanted or unliked (an annoyance); vexed.
Translations
Anagrams
- anodyne
annoyed From the web:
- what annoyed charles dickens about america
- what annoyed means
- what annoyed the narrator shooting an elephant
- what annoyed her on the bus
- what annoyed valli on the bus
- what annoyed the monkey
- what annoyed the narrator most
livid
English
Etymology
From Middle English livid, livide, from Old French livide, from Latin l?vidus (“bluish, livid; envious”), from l?ve? (“be of a bluish color or livid; envy”), from Proto-Italic *sliw??, from Proto-Indo-European *sliwo-, suffixed form of *(s)leh?y- (“bluish”). See also Old English sl? (“sloe”), Welsh lliw (“splendor, color”), Old Irish li, Lithuanian slyvas (“plum”), and Russian and Old Church Slavonic ????? (sliva, “plum”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?l?v?d/
- Hyphenation: li?vid
Adjective
livid (comparative livider or more livid, superlative lividest or most livid)
- Having a dark, bluish appearance.
- Pale, pallid.
- (informal) So angry that one turns pale; very angry; furious.
Synonyms
- (dark, bluish appearance): See also Thesaurus:bluish and Thesaurus:purplish
- (pallid): See also Thesaurus:pallid
- (very angry): See also Thesaurus:angry
Derived terms
- lividity
- lividly
- lividness
Translations
See also
- scorch
Middle English
Alternative forms
- livide
Etymology
Middle French livide, from Latin l?vidus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?li?vid(?)/, /?livid(?)/
Adjective
livid
- livid, blue (color)
Descendants
- English: livid
References
- “l??vid(e, adj. & n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-03-30.
Noun
livid (uncountable)
- livid, blue (color)
Descendants
- English: livid
References
- “l??vid(e, adj. & n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-03-30.
See also
Romanian
Etymology
From French livide, from Latin lividus.
Adjective
livid m or n (feminine singular livid?, masculine plural livizi, feminine and neuter plural livide)
- livid
Declension
livid From the web:
- what livid means
- what livid mean in spanish
- what's livid in french
- lividity what does it mean
- livid what is the definition
- what does livid mean
- what is lividity in death
- what does lividity tell the pathologist
you may also like
- annoyed vs livid
- shrewd vs circumspect
- dam vs prototype
- perforation vs wound
- whack vs cut
- lavish vs shower
- joining vs tying
- hungry vs piggish
- scratched vs smarting
- find vs reckon
- exacting vs perplexing
- certificated vs efficient
- iridescence vs coruscation
- shining vs resplendent
- permanent vs ineradicable
- code vs order
- relevance vs consequence
- icy vs uncaring
- assault vs assaulting
- biting vs angry