different between sinfulness vs malevolence
sinfulness
English
Etymology
From Middle English synfulnes, synfulnesse, synnefulnysse, equivalent to sinful +? -ness. Compare Old English synni?ness (“sinfulness”).
Noun
sinfulness (countable and uncountable, plural sinfulnesses)
- (uncountable) The property of being sinful.
- (countable) The result or product of being sinful.
sinfulness From the web:
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malevolence
English
Etymology
From Middle French malevolence, from Latin malevolentia (“malevolence”), derived from malevol?ns (“malevolent”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /m??l?v?l?ns/
Noun
malevolence (countable and uncountable, plural malevolences)
- Hostile attitude or feeling.
- to show someone malevolence
- He said it with malevolence.
- Behavior exhibiting a hostile attitude.
Synonyms
- (attitude or feeling): ill-will, malice, spite
Related terms
- malevolent
Translations
malevolence From the web:
- what malevolence meaning
- what does malevolent mean
- malevolence what is the definition
- what does malevolence
- what does malevolence mean
- what is malevolence synonym
- what is malevolence behavior
- what is malevolence used in a sentence
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