different between inflict vs inflicter
inflict
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin ?nfl?ctus, past participle of ?nfl?g?, from in- + fl?g? (“strike”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?n?fl?kt/
- Rhymes: -?kt
Verb
inflict (third-person singular simple present inflicts, present participle inflicting, simple past and past participle inflicted)
- To thrust upon; to impose.
Related terms
- infliction
Translations
inflict From the web:
- infliction meaning
- what inflict meaning in english
- what inflicts injury
- what inflict mean
- what inflict means in law
- inflicted what does it mean
- what is inflict corporal injury on spouse/cohabitant
- what is infliction of emotional distress
inflicter
English
Etymology
From inflict +? -er.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?n?fl?kt??/
- Rhymes: -?kt?(?)
Noun
inflicter (plural inflicters)
- One who inflicts.
inflicter From the web:
- inflicted meaning
- what does inflicted mean
- what does inflicted
- what self-inflicted means
- what's self-inflicted
- what is inflicted trauma
- inflected endings
- what is inflicted in a sentence
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- inflict vs inflicter
- carpel vs carpellate
- carpellate vs pistillate
- epicalyx vs pistillate
- postillate vs pistillate
- distillate vs pistillate
- pistillate vs staminateflower
- pistil vs pistillate
- pistillate vs female
- ovulates vs ovulites
- terms vs ovuliferous
- ovule vs ovuliferous
- ovulation vs anovulatory
- monovulatory vs nonovulatory
- ovulating vs nonovulating
- var vs gedrag
- gedrag vs subspecies
- basque vs gedrag
- gedrag vs demonstration
- cady vs kady