Detestable vs Destructive - What's the difference?
detestable | destructive | Related terms |
Causing destruction; damaging.
* {{quote-news
, year=2013
, date=February 14
, author=Scott Tobias
, title=Film: Reviews: A Good Day To Die Hard
, work=The Onion AV Club
Causing breakdown or disassembly.
Detestable is a related term of destructive.
As adjectives the difference between detestable and destructive
is that detestable is detestable, despicable while destructive is causing destruction; damaging.detestable
English
Usage notes
* Nouns to which "detestable" is often applied: crime, thing, practices, act, character, nature, person, conduct, villain, behavior.Derived terms
* detestablenessSee also
* hateful * abominable * loathsome * horridAnagrams
*destructive
English
Adjective
(en adjective)citation, page= , passage=After rescuing his estranged daughter in the last film, Live Free Or Die Hard, Willis heads to Russia to rescue his estranged son (Jai Courtney), a CIA agent on a mission to protect a whistleblower (Sebastian Koch) from a corrupt government official (Sergei Kolesnikov) with no shortage of destructive resources at his disposal.}}
- Catabolism is a destructive metabolism which involves the break down of molecules and release of energy.