different between inflicting vs calamity

inflicting

English

Verb

inflicting

  1. present participle of inflict

inflicting From the web:

  • inflicting meaning
  • inflicting what does it mean
  • what is inflicting corporal injury
  • what does inflicting corporal injury mean
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  • what does inflicting
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  • what does inflicting punishment mean


calamity

English

Etymology

From Middle French calamité, from Latin calamit?s (loss, damage; disaster).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /k??læm?ti/
  • Hyphenation: ca?lam?i?ty

Noun

calamity (plural calamities)

  1. An event resulting in great loss.
  2. The distress that results from some disaster.
    • 2013, Daniel Taylor, Rickie Lambert's debut goal gives England victory over Scotland (in The Guardian, 14 August 2013)[1]
      They were behind twice, first in the 11th minute when James Morrison scored a goal that was a personal calamity for Hart, and then four minutes into the second half when Kenny Miller eluded Gary Cahill to score with a splendid left-foot drive.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:disaster

Related terms

  • calamitous

Translations

calamity From the web:

  • what calamity means
  • what calamity befell the pandora
  • what calamity happens to josh’s hair how
  • what calamity has befallen thebes
  • what calamity hit orissa
  • what calamity hit orissa class 9
  • what calamity hit orissa * 1 point
  • what calamity hit prashant's
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