Abject vs Creeping - What's the difference?
abject | creeping |
(obsolete) Rejected; cast aside.
Sunk to or existing in a low condition, state, or position.
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Cast down in spirit or hope; degraded; servile; grovelling; despicable; lacking courage; offered in a humble and often ingratiating spirit.
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Showing utter hopelessness; helplessness; showing resignation; wretched.
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(obsolete) To cast off or out; to reject.
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(obsolete) To cast down; hence, to abase; to degrade; to lower; to debase.
English heteronyms
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The act of something that creeps.
* 1824 , Timothy Dwight, Theology, Explained and Defended in a Series of Sermons
As nouns the difference between abject and creeping
is that abject is a person in the lowest and most despicable condition; a castaway; outcast while creeping is the act of something that creeps.As verbs the difference between abject and creeping
is that abject is (obsolete) to cast off or out; to reject while creeping is .As an adjective abject
is (obsolete) rejected; cast aside .abject
English
Etymology 1
* From (etyl) .Adjective
(en-adj)Usage notes
* Nouns to which "abject" is often applied: poverty, fear, terror, submission, misery, failure, state, condition, apology, humility, servitude, manner, coward.Synonyms
* beggarly, contemptible, cringing, degraded, groveling, ignoble, mean, mean-spirited, slavish, vile, worthlessVerb
(en verb)- (John Donne)
References
creeping
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)- It is indubitably certain, therefore, that he is able to attend, and actually attends, to all things at the same moment; to the motions of a seed, or a leaf, or an atom; to the creepings of a worm, the flutterings of an insect, and the journeys of a mite