different between repulsive vs cowardly
repulsive
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French repulsif, from Medieval Latin repulsivus, from Latin repulsus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /???p?ls?v/
- enPR: /r?-p?l's?v/, /r?-p?l's?v/
Adjective
repulsive (comparative more repulsive, superlative most repulsive)
- tending to rouse aversion or to repulse
- (physics) having the capacity to repel
- cold, reserved, forbidding
Usage notes
- Nouns to which "repulsive" is often applied: force, interaction, potential.
Synonyms
- repellent
- similar: disgusting, vile
Antonyms
- (tending to rouse aversion) attractive
- (physics, having the capacity to repel) attractive
Translations
Anagrams
- prelusive, pulverise
Italian
Adjective
repulsive
- feminine plural of repulsivo
repulsive From the web:
- what repulsive mean
- what's repulsive in french
- repulsive force meaning
- repulsive what does it mean
- repulsive what do it mean
- what is repulsive force
- what is repulsive force in chemistry
- what is repulsive gravity
cowardly
English
Etymology
From Middle English *cowardli (adjective) and couardli (adverb), equivalent to coward +? -ly. Displaced native Old English earg.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?ka??dli/
Adjective
cowardly (comparative cowardlier or more cowardly, superlative cowardliest or most cowardly)
- Showing cowardice; lacking in courage; weakly fearful.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:cowardly
- 1780, Edmund Burke, speech at The Guildhall, in Bristol
- The cowardly rashness of those who dare not look danger in the face.
Derived terms
- cowardlily
Translations
Adverb
cowardly (comparative more cowardly, superlative most cowardly)
- (archaic) In the manner of a coward, cowardlily.
Translations
cowardly From the web:
- what cowardly means
- what's cowardly in german
- what's cowardly in french
- what does cowardly mean
- what does cowardly mean in the bible
- what do coward mean
- what is cowardly lepanto
- what did cowardly lion want
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- repulsive vs cowardly
- direction vs bid
- comedy vs jocosity
- nonsense vs giddiness
- control vs stop
- upholder vs contributor
- juror vs adjudicator
- immunity vs dispensation
- identify vs league
- conjecture vs theorise
- inhuman vs dark
- alteration vs permutation
- utter vs unequivocal
- vehement vs unrestrained
- edge vs pale
- village vs quarter
- allay vs still
- type vs assort
- vex vs heckle
- riveted vs stiff