different between furious vs woodly
furious
English
Etymology
From Old French furieus, from Latin furi?sus.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?fj??.???s/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?fj??.i.?s/, /?fj?.i.?s/
- Hyphenation: fu?ri?ous
- Rhymes: -???i?s
Adjective
furious (comparative more furious, superlative most furious)
- Feeling great anger; raging; violent.
- Rushing with impetuosity; moving with violence.
Derived terms
- fast and furious
- furiousness
- overfurious
Translations
furious From the web:
- what furious mean
- what furious five member am i
- what's furious in french
- what's furious driving
- what furiously angry
- what furious means in english
- furious what does it mean
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woodly
English
Etymology
From Middle English woodly, wodly, wodliche (“furiously, wildly”), equivalent to wood (“mad, furious, wild, insane”) +? -ly.
Adverb
woodly (comparative more woodly, superlative most woodly)
- (obsolete) Madly; furiously.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Chaucer to this entry?)
woodly From the web:
- what does woody mean in spanish
- what happened to woodley
- what county is woodlyn pa in
- woodley weight
- tyron woodley record
- what rhymes with woodley
- how to say woody in spanish
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