different between maladroit vs ungraceful

maladroit

English

Etymology

From French maladroit, from mal- (bad, badly) + adroit (skilful)

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /?mæl.?.?d???t/

Adjective

maladroit (comparative more maladroit, superlative most maladroit)

  1. Not adroit; awkward, clumsy, inept. [from 1670s]

Derived terms

  • maladroitly
  • maladroitness

Translations

Noun

maladroit (plural maladroits)

  1. Somebody who is inept, or lacking in skill, or talent.

Anagrams

  • matroidal

French

Etymology

mal- +? adroit

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ma.la.d?wa/

Adjective

maladroit (feminine singular maladroite, masculine plural maladroits, feminine plural maladroites)

  1. awkward; clumsy; maladroit

Antonyms

  • adroit
  • habile
  • dextre

Derived terms

  • maladroitement

Related terms

  • maladresse

Descendants

  • English: maladroit

Further reading

  • “maladroit” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

maladroit From the web:

  • maladroit meaning
  • what's maladroit in french
  • maladroit what does that mean
  • what does maladroit
  • what does maladroit mean in french
  • what does maladroit mean dictionary
  • what does maladroit mean in spanish
  • definition maladroit


ungraceful

English

Etymology

From un- +? graceful.

Adjective

ungraceful (comparative more ungraceful, superlative most ungraceful)

  1. (colloquial, nonstandard) Not graceful; lacking grace.

Translations

ungraceful From the web:

  • what ungracefully meaning
  • what does ungrateful mean
  • what does ungraceful mean
  • what does ungraceful
  • what do ungraceful mean
  • what does ungraceful stand for
  • what does ungraceful mean in spanish
  • what is ungracefully in tagalog
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like