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Monstrous vs Flagitious - What's the difference?

monstrous | flagitious | Related terms |

As adjectives the difference between monstrous and flagitious

is that monstrous is hideous or frightful while flagitious is of people: guilty of terrible crimes; wicked, criminal.

monstrous

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • hideous or frightful
  • * Shakespeare
  • So bad a death argues a monstrous life.
  • enormously large
  • a monstrous height
    a monstrous ox
  • freakish or grotesque
  • * John Locke
  • a monstrous birth
  • * Jeremy Taylor
  • He, therefore, that refuses to do good to them whom he is bound to love is unnatural and monstrous in his affections.
  • of, or relating to a mythical monster; full of monsters
  • * Milton
  • Where thou, perhaps, under the whelming tide / Visitest the bottom of the monstrous world.
  • (obsolete) marvellous; strange
  • Synonyms

    * See also

    flagitious

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (literary) Of people: guilty of terrible crimes; wicked, criminal.
  • * 1716 Nov 7th, quoted from 1742, probably Alexander Pope, God's Revenge Against Punning'', from ''Miscellanies , 3rd volume, page 227:
  • This young Nobleman was not only a flagitious Punster himself, but was accessary to the Punning of others, by Consent, by Provocation, by Connivance, and by Defence of the Evil committed […].
  • (literary) Extremely brutal or wicked; heinous, monstrous.
  • * 1959 (1985), Rex Stout, "Assault on a Brownstone", Death Times Three , page 186:
  • As he entered he boomed: "Monstrous! Flagitious !"

    Synonyms

    * (extremely brutal or cruel) (l), (l), (l), (l)

    See also

    * (l)