Frenetic vs Nonstop - What's the difference?
frenetic | nonstop |
Fast, harried; having extreme enthusiasm or energy.
(obsolete) Mentally deranged, insane.
(obsolete, medicine) Characterised by manifestations of delirium or madness.
Without stopping; without interruption or break;
Without stopping; without interruption or break
A journey, especially a nonstop flight.
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=October 14, author=David Kaufman, title=Discounters Are In for the Long Hauls, work=New York Times
, passage=With business-class seats on nonstops from British Airways and Cathay Pacific often priced up to $8,000 round trip, Mr. Exton typically flew cheaper alternatives that saved money but required layovers and plane switches. }}
English frequency adverbs
As adjectives the difference between frenetic and nonstop
is that frenetic is fast, harried; having extreme enthusiasm or energy while nonstop is without stopping; without interruption or break;.As nouns the difference between frenetic and nonstop
is that frenetic is one who is frenetic while nonstop is a journey, especially a nonstop flight.As an adverb nonstop is
without stopping; without interruption or break.frenetic
English
Alternative forms
* phrenetic (dated) * phrenetick (obsolete)Adjective
(en adjective)- After a week of working at a frenetic pace, she was ready for Saturday.
Synonyms
*frantic, frenziedExternal links
* *Anagrams
*nonstop
English
Alternative forms
* non-stopAdjective
(-)- There's a nonstop flight to Mauritius, but I'm not sitting on the same plane for thirteen hours.
Adverb
(-)- He worked nonstop for fourteen hours yesterday, just so he could get today off.
Noun
(en noun)citation
