Malady vs Accursed - What's the difference?
malady | accursed |
Any ailment or disease of the body; especially, a lingering or deep-seated disorder.
* The maladies of the body may prove medicines to the mind. Buckminster .
A moral or mental defect or disorder.
* Love's a malady without a cure. Dryden .
(prenominal) Hateful; detestable.
* ca. 1789 , ",
* 1819 , ,
(archaic, theology) Doomed to destruction or misery; cursed; anathematized.
* 1885 , Charles Abel Heurtley (translator), The Commonitory of ,
* 1912 , ,
(accurse)
As a noun malady
is any ailment or disease of the body; especially, a lingering or deep-seated disorder.As an adjective accursed is
hateful; detestable.As a verb accursed is
past tense of accurse.malady
English
Noun
(maladies)Synonyms
* ailment * disease * disorder * distemper * illness * sicknessReferences
* *accursed
English
Alternative forms
* (obsolete) accurstAdjective
(en adjective)- Accursed' race of Tiriel. behold your father // Come forth & look on her that bore you. come you ' accursed sons.
- Lo! they are charged with studying the accursed cabalistical secrets of the Jews, and the magic of the Paynim Saracens.
- —if any one, be he who he may, attempt to alter the faith once for all delivered, let him be accursed .
- For at the very moment I become accursed , at that same highest moment, I become exactly like a heathen