different between tightness vs chronic
tightness
English
Etymology
tight +? -ness
Noun
tightness (countable and uncountable, plural tightnesses)
- The quality or degree of being tight
Translations
tightness From the web:
- what tightness in chest feels like
- what tightness mean
- what's tightness in spanish
- what causes tightness in throat
- what causes tightness behind the knee
- what causes tightness in legs
- what causes tightness in stomach
- what causes tightness around ankles
chronic
English
Alternative forms
- chronick (obsolete)
Etymology
From chronical, from Old French cronike, from Latin chronicus, from Ancient Greek ???????? (khronikós, “of time”), from ?????? (khrónos, “time”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?k??n?k/
- Rhymes: -?n?k
Adjective
chronic (comparative more chronic, superlative most chronic)
- Of a problem, that continues over an extended period of time.
- 1980, Ruth Harriet Jacobs, Integrating Displaced Homemakers into the Economy (page 14)
- Peer group support is important to displaced homemakers. The Displaced Homemakers' Network has done excellent work in helping women see that their problems do not have to be chronic.
- 1980, Ruth Harriet Jacobs, Integrating Displaced Homemakers into the Economy (page 14)
- (medicine) Prolonged or slow to heal.
- Of a person, suffering from an affliction that is prolonged or slow to heal.
- Inveterate or habitual.
- (slang) Very bad, awful.
- (informal) Extremely serious.
- (slang) Good, great; "wicked".
Synonyms
- (that continues over an extended period of time): diuturnal, prolonged; see also Thesaurus:lasting
- (very bad, awful): abysmal, terrible; see also Thesaurus:bad
- (good, great): gnarly, splendid; see also Thesaurus:excellent
Antonyms
- (prolonged or slow to heal): acute, transient
Translations
Noun
chronic (countable and uncountable, plural chronics)
- (slang) Marijuana, typically of high quality.
- (medicine) A condition of extended duration, either continuous or marked by frequent recurrence. Sometimes implies a condition which worsens with each recurrence, though that is not inherent in the term.
- A person who is chronic, such as a criminal reoffender or a person with chronic disease.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:marijuana
References
- chronic in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “chronic”, in Online Etymology Dictionary
Interlingua
Adjective
chronic (not comparable)
- chronic
chronic From the web:
- what chronic disease
- what chronic means
- what chronicle means
- what chronic pain
- what chronic diseases cause anemia
- what chronic kidney disease
- what chronic pain does to the brain
- what chronic illness causes nausea
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- tightness vs chronic
- narrowness vs insignificance
- smallness vs insignificance
- insignificance vs irrelevance
- insignificance vs insignificancy
- insignificance vs unmeaningness
- inconsequential vs insignificance
- desire vs insignificance
- significance vs insignificance
- narrowness vs nearness
- difference vs nearness
- secrecy vs nearness
- nearness vs intimacy
- strictness vs nearness
- nearness vs accessibility
- nearness vs literalness
- nearness vs adjacency
- inconsiderableness vs narrowness
- inconsiderableness vs penuriousness
- greatness vs smallness