different between injust vs inust

injust

English

Etymology

in- +? just, or Old French injuste.

Adjective

injust (comparative more injust, superlative most injust)

  1. (rare and now nonstandard) Unjust, unfair.

Related terms

  • injustly
  • injustice

Anagrams

  • Justin

Catalan

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin ini?stus, inj?stus. Equivalent to in- +? just.

Pronunciation

  • (Balearic, Central) IPA(key): /i???ust/
  • (Valencian) IPA(key): /i??d??ust/

Adjective

injust (feminine injusta, masculine plural injusts or injustos, feminine plural injustes)

  1. unjust; unfair

Antonyms

  • just

Derived terms

  • injustament

Related terms

  • injustícia

Further reading

  • “injust” in Diccionari de la llengua catalana, segona edició, Institut d’Estudis Catalans.

Romanian

Etymology

From French injuste, from Latin injustus.

Adjective

injust m or n (feminine singular injust?, masculine plural inju?ti, feminine and neuter plural injuste)

  1. unfair

Declension

injust From the web:

  • what injustice mean
  • what injustice
  • what injustices exist today
  • what injustices were they responding to
  • what injustice is god responding to
  • what injustice is king referencing
  • what injustices were perpetuated by the constitution
  • what injustices were happening in the 60s


inust

English

Etymology

From Latin inurere, inustum (to burn in), from in- (in) + urere (to burn).

Adjective

inust (not comparable)

  1. (obsolete) burnt in

Anagrams

  • Sintu, Tunis, Tunis., suint, units

inust From the web:

  • what does injustice mean
  • what does industry mean
  • industrial revolution
  • social injustice
  • what is ijustine net worth
  • what is ijustine's phone number
  • what is the meaning of injustice
  • what is the definition of injustice
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