different between gunperson vs unperson
gunperson
English
Etymology
gun +? person
Noun
gunperson (plural gunpersons or gunpeople)
- (nonstandard, rare, gender-neutral) A gunman or gunwoman.
gunperson From the web:
- best personal protection weapons
unperson
English
Etymology
From un- +? person. Coined by George Orwell in 1949 as part of the Newspeak in his novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, where it refers to a person who has been executed or has fallen out of favor, whose entire history has been erased.
Noun
unperson (plural unpersons or unpeople)
- A human who has been stripped of rights, identity or humanity.
Translations
Verb
unperson (third-person singular simple present unpersons, present participle unpersoning, simple past and past participle unpersoned)
- (transitive) To strip (a human being) of rights, identity or humanity.
See also
- nonperson
Anagrams
- prenouns
unperson From the web:
- impersonal mean
- what does unperson mean in 1984
- what does personable mean
- what does impersonal
- what does personalised mean
- what is unperson
- what does personified mean
- definition impersonal
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- gunperson vs unperson
- gunpersons vs unpersons
- aggrandizes vs aggrandizer
- notationally vs taxonomy
- notationality vs taxonomy
- notational vs rotational
- offscreen vs taxonomy
- onstage vs taxonomy
- engraftments vs ingraftments
- ingraftment vs engraftment
- engraftments vs engraffments
- dragline vs taxonomy
- draglink vs dragline
- draglinks vs draglines
- unitality vs taxonomy
- unitality vs unitarity
- faulter vs vaulter
- vaulters vs faulters
- chamber vs multichambered
- multichambered vs multicamerate