different between healthy vs underanged

healthy

English

Etymology

From health +? -y.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?h?l.?i/
  • Rhymes: -?l?i

Adjective

healthy (comparative healthier or more healthy, superlative healthiest or most healthy)

  1. Enjoying health and vigor of body, mind, or spirit: well.
    Antonym: unhealthy
  2. Conducive to health.
    Synonym: healthful
    Antonym: unhealthy
  3. Evincing health.
  4. (figuratively) Significant, hefty; beneficial.

Usage notes

When a clearer distinction is intended, healthy is used to describe the state of the object, and healthful describes its ability to impart health to the recipient. Vegetables in good condition are both healthy (i.e., not rotten or diseased) and healthful (i.e., they improve the eaters' health, compared to eating junk food). By contrast, a poisonous plant can be healthy, but it is not healthful to eat it.

Derived terms

Related terms

  • heal
  • healing
  • whole

Translations

Further reading

  • healthy in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • healthy in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

healthy From the web:

  • what healthy foods to eat
  • what healthy gums look like
  • what healthy poop looks like
  • what healthy snacks can i eat
  • what healthy food should i eat
  • what healthy foods are high in calories
  • what healthy foods give you energy
  • what healthy nails look like


underanged

English

Etymology

un- +? deranged

Adjective

underanged (comparative more underanged, superlative most underanged)

  1. Not deranged or disrupted.
    • 1865, William Kirby, William Spence, An introduction to entomology (page 473)
      The wings of many male butterflies, hawk-moths, and moths, are distinguished by a remarkable apparatus [] for keeping them steady and underanged in their flight.

Anagrams

  • ungardened

underanged From the web:

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