different between harsh vs ungracious
harsh
English
Etymology
From Middle English harsk, harisk(e), hask(e), herris. Century derived the term from Old Norse harskr (whence Danish harsk (“rancid”), dialectal Norwegian hersk, Swedish härsk); the Middle English Dictionary derives it from that and Middle Low German harsch (“rough”, literally “hairy”) (whence also German harsch), from haer (“hair”); the Oxford Dictionary of English derives it from Middle Low German alone.
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /h???/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /h???/
- Rhymes: -??(?)?
Adjective
harsh (comparative harsher, superlative harshest)
- Unpleasantly rough to the touch or other senses.
- Severe or cruel.
Antonyms
- genteel
Translations
Verb
harsh (third-person singular simple present harshes, present participle harshing, simple past and past participle harshed)
- (intransitive, slang) To negatively criticize.
- (transitive, slang) to put a damper on (a mood).
Synonyms
- rough
Derived terms
- harshly
- harshness
Translations
harsh From the web:
- what harsh means
- what harshad mehta is doing now
- what harshad mehta did
- what harshad mehta family doing now
- what harshad mehta son doing
- what harshad mehta brother doing
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- what does it mean harsh
ungracious
English
Etymology
un- +? gracious
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -e???s
Adjective
ungracious (comparative more ungracious, superlative most ungracious)
- Not gracious; unkind or cold-hearted.
Derived terms
- ungraciously
- ungraciousness
ungracious From the web:
- what does ungracious mean
- what does ungracious person mean
- what is ungracious behavior
- what does gracious mean
- what does ungracious mean in a sentence
- what is ungracious behaviour
- what is ungracious synonym
- what does ungraciousness
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