different between genteel vs asteism

genteel

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French gentil (gentile), from Latin gent?lis (of or belonging to the same people or nation), from g?ns (clan; tribe; people, family) + adjective suffix -?lis (-ile). Doublet of gentle and gentile. See also gens, gender, genus, and generation.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /d??n?ti?l/

Adjective

genteel (comparative more genteel, superlative most genteel)

  1. Affectedly proper or refined; somewhat prudish refinement; excessively polite.
    • 1975, Saul Bellow, Humboldt's Gift [Avon ed., 1976, p. 407]:
      Genteel America was handicapped by meagerness of soul, thinness of temper, paucity of talent.
  2. Polite and well-mannered.
  3. Stylish or elegant.
  4. Aristocratic

Derived terms

  • genteelism
  • genteelly

Related terms

  • gentleman

Translations

Anagrams

  • genelet

genteel From the web:

  • what genteel mean
  • what's genteel comedy
  • genteel what does it mean
  • what is genteel poverty
  • what is genteel culture
  • what is genteel culture amusing the million
  • what does genteel mean
  • what is genteel used for


asteism

English

Etymology

Ultimately from Ancient Greek ??????? (asteîos, of the town; urbane), from ???? (ástu, town). Compare Greek ????????? (asteïsmós).

Noun

asteism (countable and uncountable, plural asteisms)

  1. Polite irony; a genteel and ingenious manner of deriding another.

See also

  • asteistic
  • Backhanded compliment on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • miseats, misseat, samites, tamises

asteism From the web:

  • what does asterisk mean
  • what does asteism
  • what does asterismos
  • what does asteismus mean
  • what does asteismos mean
  • what does an asterisk symbolize
  • what does the asterisk mean in texting
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like