different between threatening vs fateful

threatening

English

Alternative forms

  • threatning (obsolete)

Etymology

From threaten +? -ing.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: thr?t??n??, IPA(key): /????t.n?.??/
  • Hyphenation: threat?en?ing

Verb

threatening

  1. present participle of threaten

Adjective

threatening (comparative more threatening, superlative most threatening)

  1. Presenting a threat; menacing; frightening.

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

threatening (countable and uncountable, plural threatenings)

  1. An act of threatening; a threat.
    • 1526, William Tyndale, trans. Bible, Acts IV:
      And nowe lorde beholde their threatenynges, and graunte unto thy servauntes wyth all confydence to speake thy worde.
    • 1859-1895, Charles Dickens, All the Year Round
      The butcher's boy — a fierce and beefy youth, who openly defied the dog, and waved him off with hurlings of his basket and threatenings of his feet, accompanied by growls of "Git out, yer beast!" — now entered silently []

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fateful

English

Etymology

From fate +? -ful.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?fe?tf?l/

Adjective

fateful (comparative more fateful, superlative most fateful)

  1. Momentous, significant, setting or sealing one’s fate.
    It started with that fateful trip, history was never the same afterwards.
  2. Determined in advance by fate, fated.

Derived terms

  • fatefully

Translations

fateful From the web:

  • fateful meaning
  • fateful day meaning
  • what fateful night
  • what fateful means in spanish
  • what does fateful mean
  • what does faithful mean
  • what is fateful encounter pokemon
  • what is fateful day
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