different between unfood vs unhood

unfood

English

Etymology

From un- +? food.

Noun

unfood (countable and uncountable, plural unfoods)

  1. Foodstuff that is not fit for consumption; unhealthy or unnutritional food.
    • 2007, Diana Mourer, Go Lite on White and Be Discreet with Sweets:
      There is no way to eat and drink all the unfood and beverages and still come out healthy and strong.
    • 2010, Raymond Francis, Michele King, Never Be Fat Again:
      Sugar is added to the majority of processed foods, but refined sugar is actually an unfood. An unfood robs you of nutrition.

Synonyms

  • junk food

unfood From the web:



unhood

English

Etymology

From un- +? hood.

Verb

unhood (third-person singular simple present unhoods, present participle unhooding, simple past and past participle unhooded)

  1. (transitive) To remove the hood from.
    Antonym: hood
    • 2002, Stephen Stuebner, Cool North Wind: Morley Nelson's Life with Birds of Prey (p.109)
      He unhooded the falcon, and she snapped her brown and white head around, sizing up the surroundings.

unhood From the web:

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