different between limited vs parochial

limited

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?l?m?t?d/
  • Hyphenation: lim?it?ed

Verb

limited

  1. simple past tense and past participle of limit

Adjective

limited (comparative more limited, superlative most limited)

  1. With certain (often specified) limits placed upon it.
  2. Restricted, small, few, not plentiful.
    There are limited places available. Enrol now or you will miss out.
    I have a limited understanding of quantum physics.

Synonyms

  • finite

Antonyms

  • endless
  • infinite
  • unlimited

Derived terms

  • feature-limited
  • limited-stop
  • time-limited

Related terms

  • limitedly
  • limitedness

See also

  • Ltd.

Translations

Noun

limited (plural limiteds)

  1. (rail transport) An express train that only halts at a limited number of stops.

References

  • limited on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • delimit, melitid

limited From the web:

  • what limited the power of the english king
  • what limited government
  • what limited industrial expansion in the south
  • what limited the power of the king
  • what limited government means
  • what limited the colonists freedom
  • what limited the success of reconstruction efforts
  • what limited series are on netflix


parochial

English

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman parochial and its source Late Latin parochialis, an alteration of paroecialis (of a church province), from paroecia, from Hellenistic Greek ???????? (paroikía, stay in a foreign land), later “community, diocese”, from Ancient Greek ???????? (pároikos, neighbouring, neighbour), from ????- (para-) + ????? (oîkos, house).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /p?????k??l/
  • (US) IPA(key): /p???o?ki.?l/

Adjective

parochial (comparative more parochial, superlative most parochial)

  1. Pertaining to a parish.
  2. Characterized by an unsophisticated focus on local concerns to the exclusion of wider contexts; elementary in scope or outlook.
    The use of simple, primary colors in the painting gave it a parochial feel.
    Some people in the United States have been accused of taking a parochial view, of not being interested in international matters.
    • 1918, 1st of February, "Why I Joined The Army", an article in London's Daily Express by Daniel Desmond Sheehan
      But for men of principle and honour and straightforward thought there could be no middle course and no paltering with petty issues of party or parochial advantage.
    • 1969, T.C. Smout: A History of the Scottish People 1560-1830, p 341:
      Its atmosphere might have been provincial, but it was never merely parochial.

Derived terms

  • parochial school
  • parochial vicar
  • parochialism
  • parochially

Translations


Old French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin parochialis. Compare the inherited term paroissial.

Adjective

parochial m (oblique and nominative feminine singular parochiale)

  1. parochial

Descendants

  • ? English: parochial

parochial From the web:

  • what parochial means
  • what's parochial education
  • what parochial vicar mean
  • parochialism what does it mean
  • parochial what is word
  • what is parochial school
  • what is parochial political culture
  • what does parochial school mean
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like