different between unoccupied vs indolent
unoccupied
English
Etymology
un- +? occupied
Adjective
unoccupied (comparative more unoccupied, superlative most unoccupied)
- (of a house etc) Not inhabited, especially by a tenant
- Not being used; vacant or free
- Not employed on a task; idle
- (of territory) Not occupied by foreign troops etc
Translations
unoccupied From the web:
- what's unoccupied mean
- what unoccupied in spanish
- unoccupied what does that mean
- what is unoccupied play
- what is unoccupied bed
- what does unoccupied mean for home insurance
- what is unoccupied bed making
- what is unoccupied play in child development
indolent
English
Etymology
From French indolent, from Latin indolens, from in- (“not”) +? dol?ns (“hurting”), from doleo (“to hurt”).
Pronunciation
- (UK, US) IPA(key): /??n.d?.l?nt/
Adjective
indolent (comparative more indolent, superlative most indolent)
- Habitually lazy, procrastinating, or resistant to physical labor
- Inducing laziness
- (medicine) Causing little or no physical pain; progressing slowly; inactive (of an ulcer, etc.)
- (medicine) Healing slowly
Synonyms
- idle, work-shy; see also Thesaurus:lazy
Related terms
Translations
Anagrams
- deltonin, nontiled
French
Etymology
From Latin indolentem, accusative singular masculine and feminine of indol?ns, from in- (“not”) + dol?ns (“pain”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??.d?.l??/
- Homophone: indolents
Adjective
indolent (feminine singular indolente, masculine plural indolents, feminine plural indolentes)
- indolent (all senses)
German
Etymology
Borrowed from French indolent.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?ndo?l?nt/, /??ndol?nt/
- Hyphenation: in?do?lent
Adjective
indolent (comparative indolenter, superlative am indolentesten)
- indolent (mentally lazy)
- Synonym: denkfaul
- (medicine) insensible to pain
Declension
Related terms
- Indolenz
Further reading
- “indolent” in Duden online
- “indolent” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
Romanian
Etymology
From French indolent, from Latin indolens.
Adjective
indolent m or n (feminine singular indolent?, masculine plural indolen?i, feminine and neuter plural indolente)
- indolent
Declension
indolent From the web:
- what indolent means
- what indolent ulcer
- what does indolent mean
- indolent what is the opposite
- indolente what does it mean
- what is indolent lymphoma
- what is indolent systemic mastocytosis
- what is indolent cancer
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