different between proud vs shameful
proud
English
Alternative forms
- prowd (obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English proud, prout, prut, from Old English pr?d, pr?t (“proud, arrogant, haughty”) (compare Old English pr?tung (“pride”); pr?de, pr?te (“pride”)). Cognate with German Low German praud, Old Norse prúðr (“gallant, brave, magnificent, stately, handsome, fine”) (Icelandic prúður, Middle Swedish prudh, Danish prud), probably from Old French prod, prud (“brave, gallant”) (modern French preux), from Late Latin pr?de (“useful”), derived from Latin pr?desse (“to be of value”); however, the Old English umlaut derivatives pr?te, pr?tian, etc. suggest the word may be older and possibly native. See also pride.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p?a?d/
- Rhymes: -a?d
Adjective
proud (comparative prouder or more proud, superlative proudest or most proud)
- Feeling honoured (by something); feeling happy or satisfied about an event or fact; gratified.
- That makes one feel proud (of something one did)
- That makes one feel proud (of something one did)
- Possessed of a due sense of what one deserves or is worth.
- (chiefly biblical) Having too high an opinion of oneself; arrogant, supercilious.
- Generating a sense of pride; being a cause for pride.
- (Of things) standing upwards as in the manner of a proud person; stately or majestic.
- Standing out or raised; swollen.
- (obsolete) Brave, valiant; gallant.
- (obsolete) Excited by sexual desire; specifically of a female animal: in heat.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:arrogant
Antonyms
- ashamed
Derived terms
Related terms
- pride
- prude
Translations
Anagrams
- pour'd, pudor
Czech
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *pr?d?.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?prou?t]
- Rhymes: -out
Noun
proud m
- current
- (electricity) current
Declension
Derived terms
- proud?ní
- proudící
- proudit
- po proudu
- proti proudu
- protiproud
Further reading
- proud in P?íru?ní slovník jazyka ?eského, 1935–1957
- proud in Slovník spisovného jazyka ?eského, 1960–1971, 1989
proud From the web:
- what proud mean
- what produces bile
- what produces insulin
- what produces ribosomes
- what produces atp
- what produces the most atp
- what produces antibodies
- what produces gametes
shameful
English
Etymology
From Middle English schameful, schamfull, from Old English *s?eamfull, s?eomfull, equivalent to shame +? -ful. Cognate with Danish skamfuld (“shameful, shamefast, ashamed”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??e?mf?l/
Adjective
shameful (comparative more shameful, superlative most shameful)
- Causing or meriting shame or disgrace; disgraceful
- 2009 February 19, Gareth Lewis, Southern Daily Echo:
- "They have turned a great old English institution into a shameful clip-joint. It's a shuddering, howling tragedy."
- 2009 February 19, Gareth Lewis, Southern Daily Echo:
- Giving offense.
Synonyms
- See Thesaurus:despicable
Derived terms
- shamefully
- shamefulness
Translations
shameful From the web:
- shameful meaning
- what does shameful mean
- what a shameful behaviour
- what a shameful display
- what a shameful thing to say
- what a shameful act
- what is shameful behavior
- what are shameful things
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