different between wormish vs wordish

wormish

English

Etymology

worm +? -ish

Adjective

wormish (comparative more wormish, superlative most wormish)

  1. Like a worm.
    • 1917?, Edwin L. Sabin, How Are You Feeling Now? (page 70)
      He has scarcely time wishfully to choose the prettiest one of the nurses who look curiously down from the windows above when he glides, still wormish, underneath a portcullis, which clangs behind him like the clang of doom, and the elevator slowly ascends.

Synonyms

  • wormy

wormish From the web:



wordish

English

Etymology

From word +? -ish.

Adjective

wordish (comparative more wordish, superlative most wordish)

  1. Of or pertaining to words; verbal; wordy.
    • 1899, Philip Gengembre Hubert, The Atlantic monthly: Volume 83:
      He yieldeth to the power of the mind an image of that of which the philosopher bestoweth but a wordish description.
    • 2006, Edward Armstrong, A Ciceronian sunburn:
      "[...] But both have such an affinity in the wordish consideration, that I think this digression will make my meaning receive the fuller understanding."

Derived terms

  • wordishness

wordish From the web:

  • what does word ish mean
  • what does the hebrew word ish mean
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