Humid vs Stifling - What's the difference?
humid | stifling | Related terms |
Containing sensible moisture (usually describing air or atmosphere); damp; moist; somewhat wet or watery; as, humid earth; consisting of water or vapor.
:: Evening cloud, or humid bow.
That stifles.
:The heat was stifling ; it seemed hard to breathe and the exertion of rolling over on the bed seemed too much.
The act by which something is stifled.
* 1857 , Henry Clay Fish, Pulpit eloquence of the nineteenth century (page 507)
Humid is a related term of stifling.
As adjectives the difference between humid and stifling
is that humid is containing sensible moisture (usually describing air or atmosphere); damp; moist; somewhat wet or watery; as, humid earth; consisting of water or vapor while stifling is that stifles.As a verb stifling is
.As a noun stifling is
the act by which something is stifled.humid
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- 1667 - , Paradise Lost (1667)
Synonyms
* damp, moistExternal links
* * *stifling
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)- Every man who is destroyed must destroy himself. When a man stifles an admonition of conscience, he may fairly be said to sow the stiflings of conscience.