different between infamous vs diabolical

infamous

English

Etymology

From Medieval Latin infamosus, from Latin infamis. Displaced native Old English unhl?sful.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: ?n?f?-m?s, IPA(key): /??nf?m?s/

Adjective

infamous (comparative more infamous, superlative most infamous)

  1. Having a bad reputation, disreputable; notoriously bad, unpleasant or evil; widely known, especially for something bad.
    He was an infamous traitor.
    He was an infamous perjurer.
  2. Causing infamy; disgraceful.
    This infamous deed tarnishes all involved.
  3. (Britain, historical) Subject to a judicial punishment that deprived the infamous person of certain rights; this included a prohibition against holding public office, exercising the franchise, receiving a public pension, serving on a jury, or giving testimony in a court of law.

Derived terms

  • infamously
  • infamousness
  • infamy

Translations

References

  • Oxford English Dictionary

infamous From the web:

  • what infamous virus belongs to this class
  • what infamous means
  • what famous person died today
  • what famous people died in 2020
  • what famous person died this week
  • what infamous event happened today
  • what famous person do i look like
  • what famous people died today


diabolical

English

Etymology

From diabolic +? -al.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): [?da???b?l?k??]
  • (US) IPA(key): [?da???b?l?k??]

Adjective

diabolical (comparative more diabolical, superlative most diabolical)

  1. Extremely wicked or cruel.
  2. Of or concerning the devil; satanic.

Derived terms

  • archidiabolical
  • diabolically
  • diabolicalness

Translations

diabolical From the web:

  • what diabolical mean
  • what diabolical mean in arabic
  • diabolical what does it mean
  • what is diabolical sudoku
  • what do diabolical mean
  • what does diabolical
  • diabolic oppression
  • what is diabolical disorientation
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like