different between epilate vs depilate
epilate
English
Etymology
From e- + Latin pilus (“hair”) + -ate
Verb
epilate (third-person singular simple present epilates, present participle epilating, simple past and past participle epilated)
- To remove hair from the body by mechanical, chemical or other means.
Synonyms
- depilate
Derived terms
- epilation
- epilator
Translations
Anagrams
- pileate
epilate From the web:
- epilate meaning
- epilate what does it mean
- what is epilate hair
- what are pilates
- what does epilate
- what does emulate mean
- what does epilate stand for
- what does epilate mean in medical terms
depilate
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin depilo, depilatus.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?d?p?le?t/
Verb
depilate (third-person singular simple present depilates, present participle depilating, simple past and past participle depilated)
- To remove hair from the body.
Synonyms
- epilate
Related terms
- depilation
Translations
Anagrams
- die plate, epilated, lepadite, pileated
Italian
Verb
depilate
- second-person plural present indicative of depilare
- second-person plural imperative of depilare
- feminine plural of depilato
Latin
Verb
d?pil?te
- second-person plural present active imperative of d?pil?
depilate From the web:
- depilate meaning
- epilate meaning
- what does depleted mean
- what is depilated skin
- what does delegate
- what does delineate mean
- what does delegate mean in spanish
- what is depleted in tagalog
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- epilate vs depilate
- depilated vs epilated
- epilated vs epilates
- depilated vs depilate
- depilate vs pluckout
- hair vs depilate
- wax vs depilate
- autoprocess vs autoprocessing
- uncombinability vs uncombinable
- ethnomedical vs ethnomedicine
- cisman vs cismen
- transwomen vs ciswomen
- transperson vs transman
- transperson vs transsexual
- transperson vs transgender
- walkman vs disman
- ipod vs disman
- terms vs disman
- disman vs dismay
- dismal vs disman