different between disbelieve vs disbelieved
disbelieve
English
Etymology
Coined circa 1640, from dis- +? believe.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d?sb??li?v/
Verb
disbelieve (third-person singular simple present disbelieves, present participle disbelieving, simple past and past participle disbelieved)
- To not believe; to exercise disbelief.
- To actively deny (a statement, opinion or perception).
- To cease to believe.
Antonyms
- believe
Derived terms
- disbeliever
Related terms
- disbelief
Translations
disbelieve From the web:
- what disbelief mean
- disbeliever meaning
- what does disbelief mean
- what does disbelieve
- what do disbelief mean
- what does disbelieve me mean
- what to disbelieve
- what is disbelieve definition
disbelieved
English
Verb
disbelieved
- simple past tense and past participle of disbelieve
Adjective
disbelieved (comparative more disbelieved, superlative most disbelieved)
- Not believed; discounted; ignored
- Synonym: discredited
disbelieved From the web:
- what does disbelief mean
- what does disbelieved
- disbelieved meaning
- what do disbelief mean
- what disbelief mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- disbelieve vs disbelieved
- attempre vs attemper
- sunlessness vs taxonomy
- sunlessness vs funlessness
- sinlessness vs sunlessness
- unriddle vs taxonomy
- unriddled vs unriddler
- unriddled vs unriddle
- foldovers vs holdovers
- crossroads vs taxonomy
- crossroads vs roundabout
- crossroads vs intersection
- crossroads vs trivia
- crossroads vs intersectionroad
- misjudgments vs misjudgements
- overdrive vs overdrove
- overdries vs overdrives
- interlocutor vs conversationalist
- vehicle vs antivehicular
- vehicle vs extravehicular