acrimony |
acerbate |
As a noun acrimony
is a sharp and bitter hatred.
As an adjective acerbate is
(rare) embittered; having a sour disposition or nature.
As a verb acerbate is
to exasperate; to irritate.
ire |
acerbate |
As a noun ire
is .
As an adjective acerbate is
(rare) embittered; having a sour disposition or nature.
As a verb acerbate is
to exasperate; to irritate.
acerbate |
|
acerbate |
ascerbate |
As verbs the difference between acerbate and ascerbate
is that
acerbate is to exasperate; to irritate while
ascerbate is misspelling of acerbate.
As an adjective acerbate
is embittered; having a sour disposition or nature.
acerbate |
acerbated |
As verbs the difference between acerbate and acerbated
is that
acerbate is to exasperate; to irritate while
acerbated is (
acerbate).
As an adjective acerbate
is (rare) embittered; having a sour disposition or nature.
acerbate |
acervate |
As adjectives the difference between acerbate and acervate
is that
acerbate is (rare) embittered; having a sour disposition or nature while
acervate is (chiefly|botany|rare) heaped, or growing in heaps, or closely compacted clusters.
As verbs the difference between acerbate and acervate
is that
acerbate is to exasperate; to irritate while
acervate is (obsolete) to heap up.
acerbate |
acerate |
As adjectives the difference between acerbate and acerate
is that
acerbate is (rare) embittered; having a sour disposition or nature while
acerate is acerose; needle-shaped (
long and pointed).
As a verb acerbate
is to exasperate; to irritate.
As a noun acerate is
(chemistry) a combination of aceric acid with a salifiable base.
taxonomy |
acerbate |
As a noun taxonomy
is the science or the technique used to make a classification.
As an adjective acerbate is
(rare) embittered; having a sour disposition or nature.
As a verb acerbate is
to exasperate; to irritate.
Pages