Unmannerly vs Horrid - What's the difference?
unmannerly | horrid | Related terms |
In a way that is not mannerly.
* Shakespeare
(archaic) bristling, rough, rugged
causing horror or dread
offensive, disagreeable, abominable, execrable
Unmannerly is a related term of horrid.
As adjectives the difference between unmannerly and horrid
is that unmannerly is not mannerly while horrid is (archaic) bristling, rough, rugged.As an adverb unmannerly
is in a way that is not mannerly.unmannerly
English
Adverb
(en adverb)- their daggers unmannerly breeched with gore
horrid
English
Adjective
(en-adj)- His haughtie Helmet. horrid all with gold,//Both glorious brightnesse and great terror bredd. - , The Faerie Queen , I-vii-31
- Horrid with fern, and intricate with thorn. -
- Ye grots and caverns shagg's with horrid thorn! - , Eloisa to Abelard , I-20
- Give colour to my pale cheek with thy blood,//that we the horrider may seem to those//Which chance to find us. - Shakespeare, Cymbeline , IV-ii
- I myself will be//The priest, and boldly do those horrid rites//You shake to think on. - , Sea Voyage , V-iv
- Not in the legions Of horrid hell. - Shakespeare, Macbeth , IV-iii
- What say you then to fair Sir Percivale,//And of the horrid foulness that he wrought? - , Merlin and Vivien
- 1668' My Lord Chief Justice Keeling hath laid the constable by the heels to answer it next Sessions: which is a '''horrid shame. - , ''Diary , October 23
- About the middle of November we began to work on our Ship's bottom, which we found very much eaten with the Worm: For this is a horrid place for Worms. - , Voyages , I-362
- Already I your tears survey,//Already hear the horrid things they say. - , The Rape of the Lock , IV-108