different between unfashioned vs boisterous
unfashioned
English
Etymology
un- +? fashioned
Adjective
unfashioned (not comparable)
- Not fashioned; unmade, unformed.
unfashioned From the web:
boisterous
English
Etymology
From Middle English boistres, an alteration of Middle English boistous, from Anglo-Norman bustous (“rough”), perhaps from Old French boitous (“noisy”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?b??st???s/
Adjective
boisterous (comparative more boisterous, superlative most boisterous)
- Full of energy; exuberant; noisy.
- Characterized by violence and agitation; wild; stormy.
- Having or resembling animal exuberance.
Derived terms
- boisterously
- boisterousness
Translations
boisterous From the web:
- what boisterous means
- what's boisterous in english
- what boisterous means in spanish
- what's boisterous in german
- what boisterous in french
- boisterous what does it mean
- boisterous what is the definition
- boisterous what is the suffix
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- unfashioned vs boisterous
- graceful vs exquisite
- ruin vs extirpate
- tire vs tease
- tool vs piece
- prompt vs quicken
- slight vs shaky
- mental vs fanciful
- width vs greatness
- strict vs censorious
- spoiled vs noxious
- reliable vs first-rate
- challenging vs absorbing
- proneness vs prepossession
- contrast vs discrimination
- beneficial vs noble
- evil vs dirty
- fresh vs stimulating
- dosage vs apportionment
- beget vs obtain