different between wonderful vs edifying
wonderful
English
Alternative forms
- wonderfool (eye dialect), woonderful (eye dialect), wonderfull (archaic), wondreful (obsolete), wondrefull (obsolete), 1drfl (internet slang)
Etymology
From Middle English wonderful, wondirful, from Old English wundorful (“wonderful”), from Proto-West Germanic *wundrafull, equivalent to wonder +? -ful. Cognate Dutch wondervol (“wonderful”), German wundervoll (“wonderful”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?w?n.d?.fl/
- (US) IPA(key): /?w?n.d?.fl?/
- Rhymes: blunderful
Adjective
wonderful (comparative wonderfuller or wonderfuler or more wonderful, superlative wonderfullest or wonderfulest or most wonderful)
- Tending to excite wonder; surprising, extraordinary.
- 1992, Hilary Mantel, A Place of Greater Safety, Harper Perennial 2007, p. 278:
- He is massively corrupt. It is wonderful how the man's popularity survives.
- 1992, Hilary Mantel, A Place of Greater Safety, Harper Perennial 2007, p. 278:
- Surprisingly excellent; very good or admirable, extremely impressive.
- They served a wonderful six-course meal.
Synonyms
- (excellent, extremely impressive): great, amazing, astonishing, incredible, marvelous, fantastic, frabjous, mint
- See also Thesaurus:wonderful
- See also Thesaurus:excellent
Antonyms
- (excellent, extremely impressive): terrible, horrible
Translations
Adverb
wonderful (not comparable)
- (dialect) Exceedingly, to a great extent.
Related terms
- women are wonderful effect
- wonder
- wonderfully
- wonderland
- wonderment
- wondrous
Anagrams
- underflow, wondreful
wonderful From the web:
- what wonderful world
- what wonderful world lyrics
- what wonderful things you will be
- what wonderful name it is
- what wonderful name it is lyrics
- what wonderful news
- what wonderful world louis armstrong
- what wonderful person was born in june
edifying
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??d?fa???/
Adjective
edifying (comparative more edifying, superlative most edifying)
- That educates, informs, illuminates or instructs.
- That enlightens or uplifts.
Verb
edifying
- present participle of edify
Noun
edifying (plural edifyings)
- edification
- 2002, E. Beatrice Batson, Selected comedies and late romances of Shakespeare from a Christian perspective
- I am slightly skeptical about the neatness of these edifyings in the play. Olivia remains my best positive case, Malvolio my best negative. "Too proud," as Viola says, Olivia is humbled by both Feste and Viola, her twin fools, but more obviously and more frequently by herself, until finally she is blessed with the joy of undeserved grace and love. Malvolio will not learn that his madness is everyone's madness in Illyria.
- 2002, E. Beatrice Batson, Selected comedies and late romances of Shakespeare from a Christian perspective
Anagrams
- deifying
edifying From the web:
- what's edifying mean
- what does edifying mean in the bible
- what is edifying in the bible
- what does edifying
- what are edifying words
- what is edifying speech
- what do edifying means
- what does edifying yourself mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- wonderful vs edifying
- bored vs satiated
- easy vs confident
- express vs bellow
- tongue vs conversation
- ennoble vs flush
- exhaust vs forestall
- disarrangement vs ailment
- inch vs trail
- void vs false
- industrious vs engaged
- scamper vs prance
- prohibit vs denounce
- fastidious vs overnice
- perdition vs subversion
- insolent vs infamous
- reliable vs edifying
- block vs conglomeration
- trail vs pace
- worn vs primitive