different between delirious vs distraught
delirious
English
Etymology
From delirium +? -ous; see also Latin delirus (“silly, doting, crazy”)
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d??l????s/, /d??l?????s/
- Rhymes: -??ri?s
Adjective
delirious (comparative more delirious, superlative most delirious)
- (medicine) Being in the state of delirium.
- Having uncontrolled excitement; ecstatic.
Translations
delirious From the web:
- what delirious means
- what's delirious mania
- what is deliriously happy meaning
- what delirious in french
- what's delirious mean in spanish
- delirious what a friend i've found
- delirious what did the woman say
- delirious what a friend i've found lyrics
distraught
English
Etymology
From Middle English distraught, merger of distract (“distracted”) and straught (“stretched, distraught”), past participle of strecchen (“to stretch”). Compare also bestraught, extraught, forstraught, etc. More at distract, stretch.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d?s?t???t/
- Rhymes: -??t
Adjective
distraught (comparative more distraught, superlative most distraught)
- Deeply hurt, saddened, or worried; distressed.
- His distraught widow cried for days, feeling very alone.
- mad; insane.
Synonyms
- distressed
- pained
Derived terms
- distraughtly
- distraughtness
Translations
distraught From the web:
- what distraught mean
- what distraught means in spanish
- distraught meaning arabic
- distraught what is the definition
- distraught what does this mean
- what does distraught
- what does distraught mean in english
- what do distraught mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- delirious vs distraught
- elated vs delirious
- delirious vs desperation
- rave vs delirious
- delirious vs delirioum
- delirious vs incoherent
- delirious vs demented
- terms vs raved
- raved vs naved
- raves vs raved
- raved vs ravey
- raved vs ravel
- raved vs raced
- delirant vs deliriant
- deliriant vs delirium
- serostatus vs serosurvey
- seronegative vs serostatus
- seropositive vs serostatus
- absence vs serostatus
- presence vs serostatus