different between swollen vs tumored

swollen

English

Etymology

From Middle English swollen, i-swolle, y-swolle, yswolle, ?eswollen, from Old English swollen, ?eswollen, from Proto-Germanic *swullanaz, past participle of Proto-Germanic *swellan? (to swell). Cognate with West Frisian swollen (swollen), Dutch gezwollen (swollen), German geschwollen (swollen), Swedish svullen (swollen).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?sw??l?n/
  • Rhymes: -??l?n

Adjective

swollen (comparative more swollen, superlative most swollen)

  1. protuberant or abnormally distended (as by injury or disease).

Translations

Verb

swollen

  1. past participle of swell

See also

  • swole

Anagrams

  • Nowells, nowells

swollen From the web:

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  • what swollen lymph nodes feel like
  • what swollen tonsils look like
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tumored

English

Alternative forms

  • tumoured (Commonwealth)

Etymology

tumor +? -ed

Adjective

tumored (comparative more tumored, superlative most tumored)

  1. Affected with a tumor or tumours; swollen; distended; tumid.

References

  • tumored in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

tumored From the web:

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