Violate vs Violent - What's the difference?
violate | violent |
To break, disregard, disagree or not act according to (rules, conventions, etc.).
To rape.
Involving extreme force or motion.
Involving physical conflict.
Likely to use physical force.
Intensely vivid.
(obsolete) Produced or effected by force; not spontaneous; unnatural.
* Shakespeare
* T. Burnet
* Milton
As verbs the difference between violate and violent
is that violate is {{cx|sometimes|computing|lang=en}} To break, disregard, disagree or not act according to (rules, conventions, etc.) while violent is to urge with violence.As an adjective violent is
involving extreme force or motion.As a noun violent is
an assailant.violate
English
Verb
(violat)- The program tried to write to privileged memory, so it was flagged with a protect violate error.
- Accessing unauthorized files violates security protocol.
Derived terms
* violation * violable * violativeAntonyms
* comply * obeyExternal links
* * ----violent
English
Adjective
(en-adj)- A violent wind ripped the branch from the tree.
- We would rather negotiate, but we will use violent means if needed.
- The escaped prisoners are considered extremely violent .
- The artist expressed his emotional theme through violent colors.
- These violent delights have violent ends.
- No violent state can be perpetual.
- Ease would recant / Vows made in pain, as violent and void.
