different between earnful vs yearnful
earnful
English
Etymology
From earn +? -ful, from earn (“to yearn”).
Adjective
earnful (comparative more earnful, superlative most earnful)
- (obsolete) Full of anxiety or yearning.
- 1633, Phineas Fletcher, Piscatorie Eclogues
- Hereat the prince of prowess […] did groaning fetch a deep and earnful sigh.
- 1633, Phineas Fletcher, Piscatorie Eclogues
Anagrams
- -flurane, flaneur, flurane, flâneur, frenula, funeral
earnful From the web:
yearnful
English
Etymology
From Middle English yernful, from Old English ?iernful (“desirous, eager, zealous, diligent, anxious”), equivalent to yearn +? -ful.
Adjective
yearnful (comparative more yearnful, superlative most yearnful)
- Filled with yearning; desirous; mournful; distressing.
Usage notes
- This term was once widely and disapprovingly attributed to the poet John Keats.
Derived terms
- yearnfully
- yearnfulness
yearnful From the web:
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