different between nemorous vs nemoral

nemorous

English

Etymology

From Latin nemus, nemor- ‘grove’.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?n?m???s/

Adjective

nemorous (comparative more nemorous, superlative most nemorous)

  1. (rare) Forested; full of trees, dark with shady groves.
    • 1889, Thomas Thisleton-Dyer, The Folk Lore of Plants (Kessinger 2004, p. 22)
      Even Paradise itself, says Evelyn, was but a kind of ‘nemorous temple or sacred grove,’ planted by God himself.

Synonyms

  • forested
  • wooded

Related terms

Translations

See also

  • sylvan

Anagrams

  • enormous

nemorous From the web:



nemoral

English

Etymology

From Latin nemor?lis, from nemus (grove).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?n?m???l/

Adjective

nemoral (comparative more nemoral, superlative most nemoral)

  1. Pertaining to groves or woodland.
    • 1984, Guy Davenport, Tatlin!:
      He drank his coffee standing in the clean wash of a wind nemoral and northern, its light going thin and cold.

Related terms

  • nemorous

Anagrams

  • Monreal, almoner, moneral, normale

Serbo-Croatian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /nêmora?l/

Noun

n?mor?l m (Cyrillic spelling ?????????)

  1. immorality

Declension

nemoral From the web:

  • what does nemoral mean
  • what does nemoralis mean in latin
  • what is nemoral forests
  • what does nemoralis mean
  • what means nemoral
  • what do nemoralis eat
  • what do cepaea nemoralis eat
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