different between purposeful vs delibrate
purposeful
English
Etymology
purpose +? -ful
Adjective
purposeful (comparative more purposeful, superlative most purposeful)
- Having purpose; intentional.
- Having a purpose in mind; resolute; determined.
Synonyms
- determined
- nose to the grindstone
- focused
Derived terms
- purposefully
- purposefulness
Related terms
- purposive
Translations
purposeful From the web:
- what purposeful mean
- what's purposeful movement
- what purposeful activity means
- what purposeful means in spanish
- what purposeful activity
- what's purposeful listening
- what purposeful movement means
- what purposeful intent
delibrate
English
Etymology
Latin delibratus, past participle of delibrare (“to delibrate”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?d?l?b?e?t/
Verb
delibrate (third-person singular simple present delibrates, present participle delibrating, simple past and past participle delibrated)
- (obsolete) To strip off the bark; to peel.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Ash to this entry?)
Synonyms
- decorticate
- excorticate
Anagrams
- liberated
Latin
Verb
d?libr?te
- second-person plural present active imperative of d?libr?
delibrate From the web:
- what deliberate means
- what's deliberate practice
- what's deliberate discrimination
- deliberate meaning
- what's deliberate mistake
- what deliberate intention
- what deliberate action
- what deliberately in tagalog
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