different between villainous vs sinful

villainous

English

Etymology

From Old French vileneus

Adjective

villainous (comparative more villainous, superlative most villainous)

  1. Of, relating to, or appropriate to a villain.
  2. Wicked, offensive, or reprehensible in nature or behaviour; nefarious.

Alternative forms

  • villanous (obsolete)

Derived terms

  • villainousness

Translations

villainous From the web:

  • what villainous character are you
  • villainous meaning
  • villainous what does it mean
  • what is villainous board game
  • what is villainous show
  • so what villainous amv
  • what is villainous rated
  • what is villainous game


sinful

English

Etymology

From Middle English sinful, synful, senful, sunful, from Old English synful (sinful, guilty, wicked, corrupt), equivalent to sin +? -ful. Cognate with Dutch zondevol (sinful), German sündevoll (sinful), Danish syndefuld (sinful), Swedish syndfull (sinful), Icelandic syndfullur (sinful).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s?nf?l/

Adjective

sinful (comparative more sinful, superlative most sinful)

  1. constituting a sin; being morally or religiously wrong; wicked; evil
    Antonym: sinless
  2. (colloquial) decadent (luxuriously self-indulgent)

Derived terms

Translations

sinful From the web:

  • what sinful means
  • what sinful characteristic emerges in pahom
  • what sinful act
  • what's sinful in farsi
  • what does sinful mean
  • what is sinful nature
  • what is sinful anger
  • what is sinful nature in the bible
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