Desperate vs Depressive - What's the difference?
desperate | depressive |
Being filled with, or in a state of despair; hopeless.
* (William Shakespeare)
* , chapter=16
, title= Without regard to danger or safety; reckless; furious.
* Macaulay
Beyond hope; causing despair; extremely perilous; irretrievable.
Extreme, in a bad sense; outrageous.
* (William Shakespeare)
* Macaulay
Extremely intense.
Causing depression; dispiriting.
Affected by depression, depressed; dispirited; melancholic.
Relative to, characteristic of depression.
As adjectives the difference between desperate and depressive
is that desperate is being filled with, or in a state of despair; hopeless while depressive is causing depression; dispiriting.As a noun depressive is
a person suffering from depression.desperate
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Since his exile she hath despised me most, / Forsworn my company and rail'd at me, / That I am desperate of obtaining her.
The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=“[…] She takes the whole thing with desperate seriousness. But the others are all easy and jovial—thinking about the good fare that is soon to be eaten, about the hired fly, about anything.”}}
- desperate expedients
- a desperate offendress against nature
- the most desperate of reprobates