Hurtful vs Hurtles - What's the difference?
hurtful | hurtles |
Tending to impair or damage; injurious; mischievous; occasioning loss or injury.
* 1649 : , Eikonoklastes
* 1890 : George Henry Rohé, Text-book of hygiene
Tending to hurt someone's feelings; insulting.
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*
(hurtle)
To move rapidly, violently, or without control.
(archaic) To meet with violence or shock; to clash; to jostle.
* Fairfax
(archaic) To make a threatening sound, like the clash of arms; to make a sound as of confused clashing or confusion; to resound.
* Shakespeare
* Elizabeth Browning
To hurl or fling; to throw hard or violently.
(archaic) To push; to jostle; to hurl.
A fast movement in literal or figurative sense.
* 1975 , Wakeman, John. Literary Criticism
* Monday June 20, 2005 , The Guardian newspaper
A clattering sound.
* 1913 , Eden Phillpotts. Widecombe Fair p.26
As an adjective hurtful
is tending to impair or damage; injurious; mischievous; occasioning loss or injury.As a verb hurtles is
(hurtle).hurtful
English
Alternative forms
* hurtfull (archaic)Adjective
(en adjective)- A good principle not rightly understood may prove as hurtful as a bad.
- Well-cultivated soils are often healthy; nor at present has it been proved that the use of manure is hurtful .
Synonyms
* (tending to impair or damage) pernicious, harmful, baneful, prejudicial, detrimental, disadvantageous, mischievous, injurious, noxious, unwholesome, destructive; see alsoReferences
* * *Anagrams
*hurtles
English
Verb
(head)Anagrams
* *hurtle
English
Verb
(hurtl)- The car hurtled down the hill at 90 miles per hour.
- Pieces of broken glass hurtled through the air.
- Together hurtled both their steeds.
- The noise of battle hurtled in the air.
- The earthquake sound / Hurtling 'neath the solid ground.
- He hurtled the wad of paper angrily at the trash can and missed by a mile.
Noun
(-)- But the war woke me up, I began to move left, and recent events have accelerated that move until it is now a hurtle .
- Jamba has removed from Marlowe's Doctor Faustus all but the barest of essentials - even half its title, leaving us with an 80-minute hurtle through Faustus's four and twenty borrowed years on earth.
- There came a hurtle of wings, a flash of bright feathers, and a great pigeon with slate-grey plumage and a neck bright as an opal, lit on a swaying finial.