iniquitous

  • 21iniquitous — adj wicked, sinful, evil, Archaic. fa cinorous, Obs. scelerate, Obs. scelerous; nefarious, villainous, flagitious, heinous, infamous, notorious, Rare. nefast; black hearted, sinister, perverse, arrant, ignoble; bad, base, vile, foul, low, mean,… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 22iniquitous — in·iq·ui·tous …

    English syllables

  • 23iniquitous — UK [ɪˈnɪkwɪtəs] / US adjective formal extremely immoral or unfair …

    English dictionary

  • 24iniquitous — in•iq•ui•tous [[t]ɪˈnɪk wɪ təs[/t]] adj. characterized by iniquity; wicked; sinful • Etymology: 1720–30 in•iq′ui•tous•ly, adv. in•iq′ui•tous•ness, n …

    From formal English to slang

  • 25iniquitous — /ɪˈnɪkwətəs/ (say i nikwuhtuhs) adjective characterised by iniquity. –iniquitously, adverb –iniquitousness, noun …

  • 26iniquitous —   a. unjust; wicked.    ♦ iniquity, n …

    Dictionary of difficult words

  • 27wicked — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. evil, bad; criminal, depraved, iniquitous; cruel, heartless, sinful, vicious, immoral; difficult, disagreeable; informal, mischievous. See wrong. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Morally evil] Syn. evil,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 28vicious — vicious, villainous, iniquitous, nefarious, flagitious, infamous, corrupt, degenerate are comparable when they mean highly reprehensible or offensive in character, nature, or conduct. Vicious may imply an addiction to or connection with vice or… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 29Nefarious — Ne*fa ri*ous, a. [L. nefarius, fr. nefas crime, wrong; ne not + fas divine law; akin to fari to speak. See {No}, adv., and {Fate}.] Wicked in the extreme; abominable; iniquitous; atrociously villainous; execrable; detestably vile. [1913 Webster]… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 30Nefariously — Nefarious Ne*fa ri*ous, a. [L. nefarius, fr. nefas crime, wrong; ne not + fas divine law; akin to fari to speak. See {No}, adv., and {Fate}.] Wicked in the extreme; abominable; iniquitous; atrociously villainous; execrable; detestably vile. [1913 …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English