different between dejection vs torment
dejection
English
Etymology
From Old French dejection, from Latin dejectio (“a casting down”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d??d??k??n/
- (US) IPA(key): /d??d??k??n/
- Rhymes: -?k??n
Noun
dejection (countable and uncountable, plural dejections)
- A state of melancholy or depression; low spirits, the blues.
- The act of humbling or abasing oneself.
- Bishop Pearson
- Adoration implies submission and dejection.
- Bishop Pearson
- A low condition; weakness; inability.
- Arbuthnot
- a dejection of appetite
- Arbuthnot
- (medicine, archaic) Defecation or feces.
Synonyms
- (melancholy, depression, low spirits): despondency, downheartedness, crestfallenness
- (defecation or feces): excrement, bowel movement
Translations
dejection From the web:
- what deception means
- what deception
- what deception is vincent trying to maintain
- what deception was in motion by the allies
- dejection meaning
- what does deception mean
- what is dejection an ode about
- what does dejection
torment
English
Etymology
From Middle English torment, from Old French torment, from Latin tormentum (“something operated by twisting”), from torquere (“to twist”).
Pronunciation
- (noun) IPA(key): /?t??(?)m?nt/
- (verb) IPA(key): /t??(?)?m?nt/
Noun
torment (countable and uncountable, plural torments)
- (obsolete) A catapult or other kind of war-engine.
- Torture, originally as inflicted by an instrument of torture.
- Any extreme pain, anguish or misery, either physical or mental.
- He was bitter from the torments of the divorce.
- They brought unto him all sick people that were taken with divers diseases and torments.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:pain
Derived terms
- tormentous
Translations
Verb
torment (third-person singular simple present torments, present participle tormenting, simple past and past participle tormented)
- (transitive) To cause severe suffering to (stronger than to vex but weaker than to torture.)
- The child tormented the flies by pulling their wings off.
- 2013, Phil McNulty, "Man City 4-1 Man Utd", BBC Sport, 22 September 2013:
- Moyes, who never won a derby at Liverpool in 11 years as Everton manager, did not find the Etihad any more forgiving as City picked United apart in midfield, where Toure looked in a different class to United's £27.5m new boy Marouane Fellaini, and in defence as Aguero tormented Nemanja Vidic and Rio Ferdinand.
Derived terms
- tormentor
Translations
Middle English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French torment, from Latin tormentum.
Noun
torment (plural torments)
- torment (suffering, pain)
Descendants
- English: torment
Middle French
Alternative forms
- tourment
Etymology
From Old French torment, from Latin tormentum.
Noun
torment m (plural torments)
- torment; suffering; anguish
Old French
Alternative forms
- turment
Etymology
From Latin tormentum.
Noun
torment m (oblique plural tormenz or tormentz, nominative singular tormenz or tormentz, nominative plural torment)
- torture
- (figuratively, by extension) suffering; torment
Descendants
- Middle English: torment (borrowing)
- English: torment
- Middle French: torment, tourment
- French: tourment
References
- “tourment” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Old Occitan
Etymology
From Latin tormentum.
Noun
torment m (nominative singular torments)
- suffering; torment
Descendants
- Catalan: turment
- Occitan: torment
torment From the web:
- what torment level to farm
- what torment level should i play
- what torment do primals drop
- what torments the mariner on the boat for a week
- what torment mean
- what torment level for set dungeon
- what torment to do bounties
- what tormented the corps of discovery members
you may also like
- dejection vs torment
- narrow vs assuage
- stern vs obstinate
- raw vs nonsensical
- relate vs yoke
- bay vs cubicle
- brusque vs peremptory
- caution vs conscientiousness
- rough vs vulgar
- licence vs rudeness
- spirited vs stimulating
- random vs aimless
- connected vs complementary
- runaway vs renegade
- imposing vs transcendent
- realisation vs awareness
- indicate vs term
- informal vs vague
- enterprising vs resolute
- compliance vs grant