different between shameless vs infuriating

shameless

English

Etymology

From Middle English shameles, shamelees, schameles, schomeles, schomeleas, from Old English s?aml?as, s?eaml?as (without shame; shameless), from Proto-Germanic *skamalausaz (shameless), equivalent to shame +? -less. Cognate with West Frisian skamteleas (shameless), Dutch schaamteloos (shameless), German schamlos (shameless), Danish skamløs (shameless), Swedish skamlös (shameless), Icelandic skammlaus (shameless; unashamed).

Adjective

shameless (comparative more shameless, superlative most shameless)

  1. Having no shame, no guilt nor remorse over something considered wrong; immodest; unable to feel disgrace.

Derived terms

  • shamelessly
  • shamelessness

Translations

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infuriating

English

Etymology

infuriate +? -ing

Adjective

infuriating (comparative more infuriating, superlative most infuriating)

  1. Extremely annoying, frustrating or irritating

Derived terms

  • infuriatingly

Translations

Verb

infuriating

  1. present participle of infuriate

infuriating From the web:

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