different between manful vs high-spirited

manful

English

Etymology

From Middle English manful, manfull, equivalent to man +? -ful.

Adjective

manful (comparative more manful, superlative most manful)

  1. Showing the characteristics considered typical of a man; macho or manly
  2. (by extension) Courageous; noble; high-minded.

Derived terms

  • manfully
  • manfulness

See also

  • mainful

Anagrams

  • man flu

Middle English

Alternative forms

  • man-ful, monful, manffull, manfull

Etymology

From mon +? -ful.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?manful/

Adjective

manful

  1. Noble, brave, strong, daring, determined; displaying virtues seen as manly.

Derived terms

  • manfully
  • monfulnesse

Descendants

  • English: manful
  • Scots: manfull (obsolete)

References

  • “manful, adj.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-08-12.

manful From the web:

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high-spirited

English

Pronunciation

Adjective

high-spirited (comparative more high-spirited, superlative most high-spirited)

  1. Possessing a bold nature.
    • 1918, Jack London, "The Princess":
      "She was as fine a figure of a woman as I was a man, as high-spirited and courageous, as reckless and dare-devilish."
  2. Energetic, exuberant, or high-strung.
    • 1950 Sept. 25, "Music: Out of the Corner," Time:
      Last week a group of four high-spirited folksters known as the Weavers had succeeded in shouting, twanging and crooning folk singing out of its cloistered corner.

Translations

high-spirited From the web:

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  • what does high spirited mean
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