different between avid vs avidness
avid
English
Etymology
From French avide, from Latin avidus (“eager, desirous; greedy”), from ave? (“wish, desire, long for, crave”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /æv?d/, /æv?d/
Adjective
avid (comparative more avid or (less commonly) avider, superlative most avid or (less commonly) avidest)
- enthusiastic; keen; eager; showing great interest in something or desire to do something
Derived terms
- avidly
- avidity
- avidness
Translations
Anagrams
- AIVD, Adiv, Vida, diva
Romanian
Etymology
From French avide, Latin avidus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [a.vid]
Adjective
avid m or n (feminine singular avid?, masculine plural avizi, feminine and neuter plural avide)
- avid, eager, desirous
- greedy, grasping
Declension
Related terms
- aviditate
avid From the web:
- what avid means
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avidness
English
Etymology
avid +? -ness
Noun
avidness (uncountable)
- The characteristic of being avid.
avidness From the web:
- voidness means
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