different between unkindness vs unaffectionate

unkindness

English

Etymology

unkind +? -ness

Noun

unkindness (countable and uncountable, plural unkindnesses)

  1. (uncountable) The state or quality of being unkind.
  2. (countable) An unkind act.
  3. (countable) The collective noun for ravens
    • 2006, Kate Forsyth, The Shining City: Book Two of Rhiannon's Ride, Roc (2006), ?ISBN, unnumbered page:
      All Olwynne could remember, though, was her father falling away from her into some deep pit, his black wings bent over his face, and then hundreds of ravens, an unkindness of ravens, plummeting from the sky to peck out her eyes.
    • 2007, Elizabeth Haydon, The Thief Queen's Daughter, Starscape Books (2007), ?ISBN, page 228:
      "There's an unkindness of ravens that roosts on top of the guild. Their numbers are growing by the day. Aren't they spectacular?
    • 2010, Rick Burroughs, Alan Wake, Tor Books (2010), ?ISBN, page 38:
      A raven cawed somewhere up ahead, and its cry was answered by others, an unkindness of ravens on all sides.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:unkindness.

unkindness From the web:

  • what does uniqueness mean
  • what causes unkindness
  • unkindness meaning
  • what does uniqueness
  • what is an unkindness of ravens
  • what does an unkindness of ravens mean
  • what is a uniqueness


unaffectionate

English

Etymology

un- +? affectionate

Adjective

unaffectionate (comparative more unaffectionate, superlative most unaffectionate)

  1. Not affectionate; dispassionate.

Derived terms

  • unaffectionately

Translations

unaffectionate From the web:

  • what affectionate means
  • what does affectionate mean
  • what is unaffectionate person
  • what do unaffectionate mean
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