different between lacklustre vs insipid

lacklustre

English

Etymology

lack +? lustre

Adjective

lacklustre (comparative more lacklustre, superlative most lacklustre)

  1. (British) Alternative spelling of lackluster

Noun

lacklustre (countable and uncountable, plural lacklustres)

  1. (British) Alternative spelling of lackluster
    • 1990, The Nigerian Economist (volume 4, page lxxii)
      Secondly, the fear of offending the military has reduced the campaigns to mere lacklustres. Promises are reeled off with so much obvious lack of passion that it is quite possible the party bosses themselves hardly believe what they say []

Anagrams

  • lackluster

lacklustre From the web:

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insipid

English

Etymology

From French insipide, from Latin ?nsipidus (tasteless), from in- (not) + sapidus (savory). In some senses, perhaps influenced by insipient (unwise, foolish, stupid).

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) IPA(key): /?n?s?p.?d/

Adjective

insipid (comparative more insipid, superlative most insipid)

  1. Unappetizingly flavorless.
    Synonyms: tasteless, bland, vapid, wearish
  2. Flat; lacking character or definition.
    Synonyms: boring, vacuous, dull, bland, characterless, colourless

Derived terms

Related terms

  • insipient

Translations

Further reading

  • “insipid”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–present.
  • insipid at OneLook Dictionary Search

Romanian

Etymology

From French insipide.

Adjective

insipid m or n (feminine singular insipid?, masculine plural insipizi, feminine and neuter plural insipide)

  1. insipid, tasteless

Declension

Related terms

  • insipiditate

insipid From the web:

  • what insipid means
  • what insipidus means
  • what's insipido in english
  • insipidus what are the symptoms
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