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Doomed vs Faydom - What's the difference?

doomed | faydom |

As an adjective doomed

is certain to suffer death, failure, or a similarly negative outcome.

As a verb doomed

is (doom).

As a noun faydom is

the state of being fay or doomed.

doomed

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Certain to suffer death, failure, or a similarly negative outcome.
  • Synonyms

    * cursed

    Antonyms

    * blessed

    Verb

    (head)
  • (doom)
  • faydom

    English

    Alternative forms

    * (l)

    Noun

    (-)
  • The state of being fay or doomed.
  • (dialectal) A portent, usually of death; doom.
  • *2005 , John Dover Wilson, What happens in Hamlet :
  • Hamlet is fey, as heroes have been since the dawn of literature ; but was ever feydom so wonderfully set forth, or a doomed hero more adorable?
  • *1998 , George Wyman Bury, The land of Uz :
  • He merely got tantalizing scraps of information flung at him from the boundary wall of faydom .
  • *1853 , Charles Dickens, Household words :
  • [...] far more reduced kingdom of Magic. I am the case of real distress. I am the Magician without a shoe to stand on. My glory is departed — mine, Ichabod the Magician. Before faydom existed, was Magic, awful, erect, weird, inscrutable.