different between awfull vs ashamed
awfull
English
Adjective
awfull (comparative more awfull, superlative most awfull)
- Archaic form of awful.
Anagrams
- lawful
Middle English
Adjective
awfull
- Alternative form of agheful
awfull From the web:
- what awful means
- what awful weather
- what awful
- what awful weather (change to declarative)
- what awful news
- what awful shoes
- what's awful auntie about
- what awful day
ashamed
English
Etymology
From Middle English ashamed, aschamed, from Old English ?s?eamod, past participle of Old English ?s?eamian (“to be ashamed”), equivalent to a- +? shame +? -ed.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /???e?md/
Adjective
ashamed (comparative more ashamed, superlative most ashamed)
- Feeling shame or guilt.
- 1859, Horace Mann, Address at Antioch College:
- Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity.
- 1859, Horace Mann, Address at Antioch College:
Synonyms
- embarrassed
Antonyms
- proud
Translations
Verb
ashamed
- simple past tense and past participle of ashame
Anagrams
- hamades
ashamed From the web:
- what ashamed mean
- what ashamed sentence
- what's ashamed in french
- what does ashamed mean in spanish
- ashamed what is the situation happening
- ashamed what do you feel
- ashamed what does it means
- ashamed what preposition
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