different between villainy vs malevolence

villainy

English

Alternative forms

  • vilanie, vilany (obsolete)

Etymology 1

From Middle English vileinie, vileynye, from Anglo-Norman vilenie, from Old French vilanie.

Noun

villainy (countable and uncountable, plural villainies)

  1. Evil or wicked character or behaviour.
  2. A wicked or treacherous act.
Synonyms
  • See Thesaurus:villainy

Etymology 2

From villain +? -y.

Adjective

villainy (comparative more villainy, superlative most villainy)

  1. Characteristic of a villain.

villainy From the web:

  • villainy meaning
  • villainy what does it mean
  • what is villainy in literature
  • what does villainy spell
  • what does villainy mean in english
  • what do villainy mean
  • what does villainy mean dictionary
  • what is villainy behavior


malevolence

English

Etymology

From Middle French malevolence, from Latin malevolentia (malevolence), derived from malevol?ns (malevolent).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /m??l?v?l?ns/

Noun

malevolence (countable and uncountable, plural malevolences)

  1. Hostile attitude or feeling.
    to show someone malevolence
    He said it with malevolence.
  2. Behavior exhibiting a hostile attitude.

Synonyms

  • (attitude or feeling): ill-will, malice, spite

Related terms

  • malevolent

Translations

malevolence From the web:

  • what malevolence meaning
  • what does malevolent mean
  • malevolence what is the definition
  • what does malevolence
  • what does malevolence mean
  • what is malevolence synonym
  • what is malevolence behavior
  • what is malevolence used in a sentence
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like