different between etymological vs excrescent
etymological
English
Etymology
etymology +? -ical
Adjective
etymological (comparative more etymological, superlative most etymological)
- (not comparable) Of or relating to etymology.
- (comparable) (of a word) Consistent with its etymological characteristics (in historical usage and/or the source language).
Derived terms
- etymological argument
- etymologically
Related terms
Translations
etymological From the web:
- what's etymological definition of humanities
- what etymologically mean
- what etymological philosophy
- etymologically what does philo mean
- etymologically what does the word church mean
- etymologically what does philo mean brainly
- etymologically what does philia mean
- etymologically what is meant by jurisprudence
excrescent
English
Etymology
From Latin excr?sc?ns, present participle of excr?sc?.
Noun
excrescent (plural excrescents)
- A growing mutation, usually abnormal.
- (phonetics) A sound in a word without etymological reason.
- "B" in "nimble" is an excrescent.
Related terms
- excrescence
Adjective
excrescent (comparative more excrescent, superlative most excrescent)
- Growing out in an abnormal or morbid manner or as a superfluity.
excrescent From the web:
- what does excrescence mean
- what does excrescence
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