different between degraded vs unnatural

degraded

English

Etymology

See degrade and compare French degré (step).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /d????e?d?d/

Adjective

degraded (comparative more degraded, superlative most degraded)

  1. Feeling or having undergone degradation; deprived of dignity or self-respect.
    • The Netherlands [] were reduced, practically, to a very degraded condition.
  2. (biology) Having the typical characters or organs in a partially developed condition, or lacking certain parts.
    • 1852, James Dwight Dana, Crustacaea
      The Grapsoid species are represented of a degraded form in Porcellana
  3. (heraldry, not comparable) Having steps; said of a cross whose extremities end in steps growing larger as they leave the centre; on degrees.

Synonyms

  • (deprived of dignity): humiliated

Translations

Verb

degraded

  1. simple past tense and past participle of degrade

degraded From the web:

  • what degraded means
  • what does degraded mean
  • what is degraded energy
  • what is degraded soil
  • what is degraded land
  • what is degraded by peroxisome
  • what does degraded performance mean
  • what is degraded dna


unnatural

English

Etymology

From Middle English unnatural, unnaturel, equivalent to un- +? natural.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?n?næt?????l/
  • Hyphenation: un?nat?u?ral

Adjective

unnatural (comparative more unnatural, superlative most unnatural)

  1. Not natural.
  2. Not occurring in nature, the environment or atmosphere
  3. Going against nature; perverse.

Antonyms

  • natural

Derived terms

  • unnaturally
  • unnaturalness

Translations

Anagrams

  • lunarnaut

unnatural From the web:

  • what unnatural events happened in macbeth
  • what unnatural hair color is for you
  • what unnatural hair color quiz
  • what unnatural elements are there
  • what are the unnatural events in macbeth
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