terms |
conculcate |
As a noun terms
is .
As a verb conculcate is
(obsolete) to tread or trample underfoot.
conculcate |
conculcated |
As verbs the difference between conculcate and conculcated
is that
conculcate is to tread or trample underfoot while
conculcated is past tense of conculcate.
underfoot |
conculcate |
As an adjective underfoot
is situated under one’s feet.
As an adverb underfoot
is
(to crush, to trample, etc.) Under one's feet.
As a verb conculcate is
to tread or trample underfoot.
trample |
conculcate |
As verbs the difference between trample and conculcate
is that
trample is to crush something by walking on it while
conculcate is (obsolete) to tread or trample underfoot.
As a noun trample
is the sound of heavy footsteps.
tread |
conculcate |
As verbs the difference between tread and conculcate
is that
tread is to step or walk (on or over something); to trample while
conculcate is to tread or trample underfoot.
As a noun tread
is a step.