different between unsparing vs benevolent
unsparing
English
Etymology
un- +? sparing
Adjective
unsparing (comparative more unsparing, superlative most unsparing)
- Without sparing; liberal; profuse; thorough.
Derived terms
- unsparingly
- unsparingness
Translations
References
- “unsparing”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–present.
Anagrams
- unparsing
unsparing From the web:
- unsparingly meaning
- what does unsparing mean
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- what does inspiring mean
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- an inspiring person
benevolent
English
Etymology
From Old French benevolent, borrowed from Latin benevol?ns ("well wishing"). Displaced native Old English welwillende.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /b??n?v?l?nt/
Adjective
benevolent (comparative more benevolent, superlative most benevolent)
- Having a disposition to do good.
- Chinese and Eastern mythologies describe dragons as benevolent.
- Possessing or manifesting love for mankind.
- Altruistic, charitable, good, just and fair.
Antonyms
- malevolent
Derived terms
- benevolently
- benevolentness
Related terms
Translations
benevolent From the web:
- what benevolent means
- what benevolent fund
- what benevolent means in spanish
- what benevolent fund and group insurance
- what benevolent mean in arabic
- what's benevolent dictator
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- what benevolent deception
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