What is the difference between desperate and disparate?

What is the difference between desperate and disparate?

Desperate is an adjective meaning extreme or very bad. For example: “The survivors were desperate for food.” Disparate is an adjective that means different in every way. For example: “They came from two disparate cultures.”

What’s another word for desperate?

Some common synonyms of desperate are despairing, despondent, and hopeless. While all these words mean “having lost all or nearly all hope,” desperate implies despair that prompts reckless action or violence in the face of defeat or frustration.

What is a synonym for disparate?

Some common synonyms of disparate are different, divergent, diverse, and various. While all these words mean “unlike in kind or character,” disparate emphasizes incongruity or incompatibility.

What is mean by desperately?

Desperate means “having lost all hope.” If you are desperate for food, it means you are starving, possibly about to die. If you are in a desperate situation, it means things are really, really bad.

What is another word for differently?

What is another word for differently?

dissimilarly disparately
contrastingly distinctly
distinctively incompatibly
inconsistently unlikely
clashingly conflictingly

How do you say something is very different?

What is another word for very different?

a far cry from as like as chalk and cheese
disparate dissimilar
distinct distinctive
mismatched poles apart
very inconsistent very unalike

How do you explain however?

Using however

  1. Meaning ‘but’ The most common way of using ‘however’ is to mean ‘but’.
  2. Meaning ‘no matter how’ Another, less common, meaning for ‘however’ is ‘no matter how’.
  3. Meaning ‘in whatever way’ In this form ‘however’ can be at the beginning or in the middle of a sentence, with no punctuation around it.
  4. Alternatives.

How do you write however?

Use a semi-colon (;) before and a comma (,) after however when you are using it to write a compound sentence. If ‘however’ is used to begin a sentence, it must be followed by a comma, and what appears after the comma must be a complete sentence. However, there was no need to repeat the data entry.

Where do we use ever?

Ever usually means at any time and can be used to refer to past, present and future situations. The converse, meaning at no time, is never. Ever is mainly used in questions. Sometimes it is used in negative sentences (not ever) as an alternative to never.

Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Press ESC to cancel.

Back To Top