different between outlandish vs amusing

outlandish

English

Etymology

From Middle English outlandisch, from Old English ?tlendis?, from Proto-Germanic *?tlandiskaz. Related to ?tland (foreign land, land abroad) (English outland). Sense of “bizarre” from 1590s. Surface analysis outland +? -ish. Cognate to German ausländisch, dated Dutch uitlands (now buitenlands), Swedish utländsk, all “foreign, non-domestic”.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a??t?lænd??/
  • Rhymes: -ænd??

Adjective

outlandish (comparative more outlandish, superlative most outlandish)

  1. bizarre, strange
  2. (archaic) foreign, alien

Synonyms

  • (bizarre, strange): See also Thesaurus:strange
  • (foreign, alien): See also Thesaurus:foreign

Derived terms

  • outlandishly
  • outlandishness

Related terms

  • outland

Translations

References

outlandish From the web:

  • what outlandish meaning
  • outlandish what does it mean
  • outlandish what happened
  • what does outlandish
  • what is outlandish behavior
  • what do outlandish mean
  • what does outlandish mean sentence
  • definition outlandish


amusing

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??mju?z??/

Verb

amusing

  1. present participle of amuse

Adjective

amusing (comparative more amusing, superlative most amusing)

  1. Entertaining.
  2. Funny, hilarious.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:funny
  • See also Thesaurus:witty

Antonyms

  • unamusing

Derived terms

  • amusingness

Translations

Anagrams

  • Mungias

amusing From the web:

  • what amusing means
  • what amusing story tells about
  • what does amusing mean
  • what do amusing mean
  • definition amusing
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