different between stolen vs rubbish
stolen
English
Etymology
From Middle English stolen, istolen, from Old English stolen, ?estolen, from Proto-Germanic *stulanaz, past participle of Proto-Germanic *stelan? (“to steal”), equivalent to stole +? -en. Cognate with Scots stellin, stollin (“stolen”), Saterland Frisian stäälen (“stolen”), West Frisian stellen (“stolen”), Dutch gestolen (“stolen”), German Low German stohlen (“stolen”), German gestohlen (“stolen”), Swedish stulen (“stolen”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?st??l?n/
- Rhymes: -??l?n
Verb
stolen
- past participle of steal
Adjective
stolen (not comparable)
- That has been stolen.
Translations
Anagrams
- Elston, Leston, Letson, Noltes, Solent, Tolens, lentos, onlest, telson
Danish
Noun
stolen c
- definite singular of stol
Norwegian Bokmål
Pronunciation
Noun
stolen m
- definite singular of stol
Norwegian Nynorsk
Noun
stolen m
- definite singular of stol
Swedish
Noun
stolen
- definite singular of stol
stolen From the web:
- what stolen land am i on
- what stolen generation
- what's stolen valor
- stolen meaning
- what's stolen property
- what stolen goods
- what stolen bike
- german stollen
rubbish
English
Etymology
From Middle English r?b?us (“rubbish, building rubble”), further origin uncertain; possibly from Anglo-Norman rubous, rubouse, rubbouse (“refuse, waste material; building rubble”), and compare Late Latin rebbussa, robousa, robusium, robusum, rubisum, rubusa, rubusium (although the Anglo-Norman and Latin words may be derived from the English word instead of the other way around). The English word may be related to rubble, though the connection is unclear.
The verb is derived from the noun.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /???b??/
- (General American) IPA(key): /???b??/, /???-/
- Hyphenation: rub?bish
Noun
rubbish (usually uncountable, plural rubbishes)
- (chiefly Australia, New Zealand, Britain) Refuse, waste, garbage, junk, trash.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:trash
- (by extension, chiefly Australia, New Zealand, Britain) An item, or items, of low quality.
- (by extension, chiefly Australia, New Zealand, Britain) Nonsense.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:nonsense
- (archaic) Debris or ruins of buildings.
Alternative forms
- rubbage (now dialectal)
Derived terms
Related terms
- rubble (possibly)
Translations
Adjective
rubbish (comparative more rubbish, superlative most rubbish)
- (chiefly Australia, New Zealand, Britain, colloquial) Exceedingly bad; awful.
- Synonyms: abysmal, crappy, horrendous, shitty, terrible; see also Thesaurus:bad, Thesaurus:low-quality
Translations
Interjection
rubbish (chiefly Australia, Britain, New Zealand, colloquial)
- Used to express that something is exceedingly bad, awful, or terrible.
- Used to express that what was recently said is nonsense or untrue; balderdash!, nonsense!
- Synonyms: bollocks, bullshit
Translations
Verb
rubbish (third-person singular simple present rubbishes, present participle rubbishing, simple past and past participle rubbished)
- (transitive, chiefly Australia, Britain, New Zealand, colloquial) To criticize, to denigrate, to denounce, to disparage. [from c. 1950s (Australia, New Zealand)]
Derived terms
- rubbisher
Translations
References
Further reading
- waste on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “rubbish”, in Online Etymology Dictionary
rubbish From the web:
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- what rubbish meaning in urdu
- what rubbish goes in the blue bin
- what rubbish meaning in hindi
- what rubbish in hindi
- what rubbish meaning in marathi
- what rubbish meaning in bengali
- what rubbish meaning in kannada
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