different between malicious vs roguery
malicious
English
Alternative forms
- malitious (obsolete)
Etymology
From Old French malicios, from Latin malitiosus, from malitia (“malice”), from malus (“bad”). Displaced native Old English yfelwillende.
Pronunciation
- enPR: m?l?sh'?s, IPA(key): /m??l???s/
Adjective
malicious (comparative more malicious, superlative most malicious)
- Of, pertaining to, or as a result of malice or spite
- spiteful and deliberately harmful
- He was sent off for a malicious tackle on Jones.
Synonyms
- malevolent
- evil
- See also Thesaurus:evil
Derived terms
- maliciously
- maliciousness
- malicious mischief
Translations
malicious From the web:
- what malicious mean
- what malicious software replicates itself
- what malicious software
- what malicious code can do
- what does malicious mean
roguery
English
Etymology
rogue +? -ery
Noun
roguery (countable and uncountable, plural rogueries)
- malicious or reckless behaviour
- mischievous behaviour
Translations
roguery From the web:
- what does roguery mean
- what does roguery do bannerlord
- what is roguery good for bannerlord
- roguery meaning
- what does roguery
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- malicious vs roguery
- roguery vs mischief
- waggery vs jaggery
- jest vs waggery
- remark vs waggery
- wag vs waggery
- droll vs waggery
- terms vs hogsty
- nonadic vs nomadic
- nonadic vs nonandic
- octadic vs nonadic
- tetradic vs nonadic
- nonad vs nonadic
- nonadic vs ninefold
- monodic vs monody
- polyodic vs polyadic
- polyad vs polyadic
- polyadic vs dyadic
- manx vs gadhelic
- gaelic vs gadhelic