different between wreakful vs wreckful
wreakful
English
Alternative forms
- wreakfull (obsolete)
- wreckful (obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English wrakeful, equivalent to wreak +? -ful.
Adjective
wreakful (comparative more wreakful, superlative most wreakful)
- (poetic or obsolete) Vengeful; angry, furious.
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, V.1:
- Ne any liv'd on ground that durst withstand / His dreadfull heast, much lesse him match in fight, / Or bide the horror of his wreakfull hand […].
- 1802, The Spirit of Anti-Jacobinism:
- He sinks, to every wreakful fiend a prey; / His bosom shut to each affection kind; [...]
- 1842, Thomas Miller, Rural Sketches:
- Unpropp'd, unsuccoured by stake or tree, / From wreakful storms' impetuous tyranny, [...]
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, V.1:
Derived terms
- wreakfully
Related terms
- wreaker
- wreakless
wreakful From the web:
- what does wrecked mean
- what did reckful stream
- what happened reckful
- what is reckful net worth
- what does getting wrecked mean
wreckful
English
Etymology
wreck +? -ful
Adjective
wreckful (comparative more wreckful, superlative most wreckful)
- (poetic) Causing wreckage; ruinous.
wreckful From the web:
- what does wreckful mean
- what happened to reckful
- what did reckful stream
- what is reckful net worth
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- wreakful vs wreckful
- wreakfully vs wreakful
- furious vs wreakful
- angry vs wreakful
- reckful vs wreckful
- wrackful vs wreckful
- ruinous vs wreckful
- wreckage vs wreckful
- wreckful vs destructive
- terms vs repletive
- repletive vs depletive
- repletively vs repletive
- fill vs repletive
- replete vs repletive
- terms vs depletive
- deletive vs depletive
- magickal vs mystickal
- mystickal vs mystical
- adulterate vs unadulterate
- terms vs unadulterate