different between devotion vs dutifulness
devotion
English
Wikiquote
Etymology
From Old French devocion, from Latin d?v?ti?, from d?v?tum +? -tio, from the supine of d?vove? (“vow, devote”); equivalent to devote +? -ion.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d??v????n/
- (US) IPA(key): /d??vo???n/
Noun
devotion (usually uncountable, plural devotions)
- (uncountable) The act or state of devoting or being devoted.
- (uncountable) Feeling of strong or fervent affection; dedication
- (uncountable) Religious veneration, zeal, or piety.
- (countable, ecclesiastical) A prayer (often found in the plural)
- (in the plural, obsolete) Religious offerings; alms.
Translations
Middle French
Noun
devotion f (plural devotions)
- devotion (quality of being devoted)
devotion From the web:
- what devotion means
- what devotional is right for me
- what's devotion dbd
- what devotion are you meaning
- what devotional does rihanna use
- what's devotion in spanish
- what devotion to duty means
dutifulness
English
Alternative forms
- dutifullness (obsolete)
Etymology
dutiful +? -ness
Noun
dutifulness (usually uncountable, plural dutifulnesses)
- The state of being dutiful.
dutifulness From the web:
- dutifulness meaning
- what does dutifulness mean
- what does dutifulness
- what does dutifully mean
- what do dutifulness meaning
- what is called dutifulness
- what is a dutifulness person
- what does self dutifulness mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- devotion vs dutifulness
- exultant vs blithesome
- hallucinatory vs seeming
- frumpery vs show
- rigid vs closely
- plan vs paradigm
- neighbourhood vs province
- imperfect vs abnormal
- class vs condition
- proclamation vs display
- dismay vs abomination
- mortification vs debasement
- fixed vs confirmed
- depressed vs pathetic
- snappy vs crunchy
- contusion vs stab
- tingle vs irritate
- yet vs too
- mishap vs deterioration
- limit vs assuage