different between unsweat vs unsweet
unsweat
English
Etymology
un- +? sweat
Verb
unsweat (third-person singular simple present unsweats, present participle unsweating, simple past and past participle unsweated)
- (transitive) To relieve from perspiration; to ease or cool after exercise or toil.
Anagrams
- unwaste
unsweat From the web:
unsweet
English
Etymology
From Middle English unswete, from Old English unsw?te (“unsweet; bitter; sour”), from Proto-Germanic *unsw?tuz (“unsweet”), equivalent to un- +? sweet. Cognate with West Frisian ûnswiet (“unsweet”), Dutch onzoet (“unsweet”), German Low German unsööt (“unsweet”), German unsüß (“unsweet”), Swedish osöt (“unsweet”), Icelandic ósætur (“unsweet”).
Adjective
unsweet (comparative more unsweet, superlative most unsweet)
- Not sweet.
Quotations
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:unsweet.
Synonyms
- unsweetened, nonsweet, unsugared
Antonyms
- sweet, sugared
Derived terms
unsweet tea
Translations
unsweet From the web:
- what unsweetened mean
- what's unsweetened chocolate
- what's unsweetened milk
- what's unsweetened tea
- what is unsweetened cocoa powder
- what is unsweetened applesauce
- what is unsweetened cranberry juice good for
- what is unsweetened peanut butter
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- unsweat vs unsweet
- unsweat vs unseat
- unsweat vs sweat
- backtraced vs backtraces
- parkers vs porkers
- porters vs porkers
- porkers vs porkets
- porkers vs workers
- porkers vs corkers
- yorkers vs porkers
- porkers vs pokers
- possesed vs tolerate
- hypnotises vs hypnotisee
- hypnotists vs hypnotises
- hypnotisees vs hypnotises
- hypnotise vs hypnotisee
- itemised vs catalogued
- exhaustive vs itemised
- itemised vs itemises
- itemised vs itemise