different between ludic vs ludibund
ludic
English
Etymology
From French ludique, from Latin ludo (“I play”)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?lu?.d?k/
- Rhymes: -u?d?k
Adjective
ludic (comparative more ludic, superlative most ludic)
- Of or pertaining to play; playful.
- Of or pertaining to games of chance.
Derived terms
- ludic fallacy
Related terms
- ludenic
- ludology
Translations
Anagrams
- dulic, lucid
Romanian
Etymology
From French ludique
Adjective
ludic m or n (feminine singular ludic?, masculine plural ludici, feminine and neuter plural ludice)
- playful
Declension
ludic From the web:
- what ludicrous mean
- what's ludicrous mode
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- what ludic mean
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ludibund
English
Etymology
From Latin ludibundus.
Adjective
ludibund (comparative more ludibund, superlative most ludibund)
- (archaic, formal) sportive, playful, frolicsome
Synonyms
- playful
Related terms
- ludibundness
- ludic
- ludicrous
- ludian
- ludible
ludibund From the web:
- what does ludibund mean
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