different between propitious vs predisposed

propitious

English

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman and Old French propicius, from Latin propitius (favorable, well-disposed, kind). Compare French propice, Portuguese propício and Spanish propicio.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /p?o??p???s/
  • Hyphenation: pro?pi?tious

Adjective

propitious (comparative more propitious, superlative most propitious)

  1. Favorable; benevolent.
    Synonym: favorable
    Antonym: unpropitious
  2. Advantageous.
    Synonym: advantageous
  3. Characteristic of a good omen.
    Synonyms: auspicious, fortunate, promising
  4. (archaic) Favorably disposed towards someone.

Antonyms

  • unpropitious
Translations

Related terms

  • propitiate
  • propitiation
  • propitiously
  • propitiousness

Further reading

  • propitious in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • propitious in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • propitious at OneLook Dictionary Search

propitious From the web:

  • propitious meaning
  • propitious what does it mean
  • what does propitious mean in the bible
  • what is propitious niche
  • what is propitious selection
  • what do propitious mean
  • what light propitious shone
  • what does propitious omen mean


predisposed

English

Etymology

pre- +? disposed

Adjective

predisposed (comparative more predisposed, superlative most predisposed)

  1. Inclined.
  2. Made susceptible to.

Translations

Verb

predisposed

  1. simple past tense and past participle of predispose

predisposed From the web:

  • what predisposes a patient to pneumonia
  • predisposed meaning
  • predisposed what does it mean
  • what does predisposed mean in medical terms
  • what do predisposed mean
  • what is predisposed diabetes
  • what does predisposed diabetes mean
  • what is predisposed condition
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like