different between joyous vs frolicsome
joyous
English
Etymology
From Middle English joyous, joious, from Old French joieus, from joie + -eus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /d?????s/
- Rhymes: -???s
Adjective
joyous (comparative more joyous, superlative most joyous)
- Full of joy; happy.
- Synonyms: blissome, blissy, blithe, gladsome
Derived terms
- joyously
- overjoyous
Related terms
- joy
- joyful
- joyfully
- joyfulness
Translations
joyous From the web:
- what joyous mean
- what joyous day meaning
- what joyous means in spanish
- joyous what part of speech
- joyously what does it mean
- what does joyous mean
- what does joyeux noel mean
- what do joyous mean
frolicsome
English
Alternative forms
- frolicksome
Etymology
frolic +? -some
Adjective
frolicsome (comparative more frolicsome, superlative most frolicsome)
- Characterised or marked by frolicking; playful.
Derived terms
- frolicsomeness
Translations
frolicsome From the web:
- frolicsome meaning
- what does frolicsome mean
- what do frolicsome mean
- frolicsome synonyms
- what does frolicsome
- what does frolicsome stand for
- what is a frolicsome person
- kriel meaning
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- joyous vs frolicsome
- illnatured vs cutting
- old vs uninteresting
- circumference vs bounds
- flat vs jejune
- worthy vs reasonable
- unworldly vs ingenuous
- smooth vs undisturbed
- pet vs kiss
- masked vs underhanded
- run vs converge
- lumpish vs phlegmatic
- numskull vs halfwit
- fun vs buffoonery
- width vs area
- stress vs effect
- frizz vs knot
- hedge vs limit
- penetrating vs searching
- deception vs trickiness