BAD vs SEVERE: NOUN
- That which is below standard or expectations as of ethics or decency
- Preterit of bid.
- That which is bad. A bad condition: as, to go to the bad (see below). A bad thing: as, there are bads and goods among them.
- N/A
BAD vs SEVERE: ADJECTIVE
- Not fresh; rotten or spoiled.
- Not working properly; defective.
- Full of or exhibiting faults or errors.
- Having no validity; void.
- Being so far behind in repayment as to be considered a loss.
- Severe; intense.
- Being in poor health or in pain.
- Being in poor condition; diseased.
- Sorry; regretful.
- Very good; great.
- Injurious in effect; detrimental.
- Very intense
- Nonstandard
- Below average in quality or performance
- Not capable of being collected
- Feeling physical discomfort or pain (`tough' is occasionally used colloquially for `bad')
- (of foodstuffs) not in an edible or usable condition
- Not working properly
- Reproduced fraudulently
- Disagreeable, unpleasant, or disturbing.
- Characterized by wickedness or immorality
- Keenly sorry or regretful
- Capable of harming
- Physically unsound or diseased
- Not achieving an adequate standard; poor.
- Immoral or evil.
- Vulgar or obscene.
- Disobedient or naughty.
- Unfavorable.
- Having undesirable or negative qualities
- Malodorous, foul.
- Not financially safe or secure
- Spoiled, rotten, overripe.
- Wanting good qualities, whether physical or moral; injurious, hurtful, inconvenient, offensive, painful, unfavorable, or defective, either physically or morally; evil; vicious; wicked; -- the opposite of good.
- This sense?) (slang) Fantastic.
- Not good; unfavorable; negative.
- Seemingly non-appropriate, in manners, etc.
- Not suitable or fitting.
- Tricky; stressful; unpleasant.
- Faulty; not functional.
- Evil; wicked.
- Intensely or extremely bad or unpleasant in degree or quality
- Very bad in degree or extent
- Severely simple
- Very strong or vigorous
- Causing fear or anxiety by threatening great harm
- Unsparing, harsh, or strict, as in treatment of others.
- Marked by or requiring strict adherence to rigorous standards or high principles.
- Extremely plain in substance or style.
- Causing great discomfort, damage, or distress.
- Very dangerous or harmful; grave or grievous.
- Extremely difficult to perform or endure; trying.
- Rigidly methodical, or adherent to rule or principle; exactly conformed to a standard; not allowing or employing unneccessary ornament, amplification, etc.; strict; -- said of style, argument, etc.
- Difficult to be endured; exact; critical; rigorous.
- Very bad or intense.
- Strict or harsh.
- Sober, plain in appearance, austere.
- Stern or forbidding, as in manner or appearance.
- Unsparing and uncompromising in discipline or judgment
BAD vs SEVERE: VERB
- To shell (a walnut).
- Alternative past tense of bid. See bade.
- N/A
BAD vs SEVERE: ADVERB
- Very much; strongly
- With great intensity (`bad' is a nonstandard variant for `badly')
- Badly.
- N/A
BAD vs SEVERE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Serious or severe
- Feeling or expressing regret or sorrow or a sense of loss over something done or undone
- Very much
- Strongly
- Hurtful; noxious; having an injurious or unfavorable tendency or effect: with for: as, bad air or bad food; late hours are bad for the health; this step would be bad for your reputation or prospects.
- Evil; ill; vicious; wicked; depraved: applied to persons, conduct, character, influence, etc.: as, a bad man; bad conduct; a bad life; a bad heart; bad influence, etc.
- Offensive; disagreeable; troublesome; painful; grievous: as, bad treatment; a bad temper; it is too bad that you had to wait so long.
- [Bad is the ordinary antithesis of good, in all its senses, whether positively, ‘evil,’ ‘harmful,’ or negatively, ‘not good,’ ‘not satisfactory,’ and whether substantively, ‘being evil,’ or causally, ‘causing harm.’ The senses run into one another, the precise application being determined by the context.]
- Ill; in ill health; sick; in unsound condition: as, to feel bad; to be bad with rheumatism; a bad hand or leg.
- Not good; defective; worthless; poor; of no value: as, bad coin; bad debts; a bad soil; a bad crop; a bad piece of work; bad health.
- Incorrect; faulty: as, a bad aim; bad English; a bad pronunciation.
- Not valid; not sound: as, a bad claim; a bad plea.
- Unfavorable; unfortunate: as, bad news; bad success.
- (idiom) (in bad) In trouble or disfavor.
- (idiom) (my bad) Used to acknowledge that one is at fault.
- (idiom) (half/so) Reasonably good.
- (idiom) (that's too bad) Used to express sadness or sympathy.
- (idiom) (that's too bad) Used in response to a protest or complaint to express insistence that the speaker's expectation be met.
- (imperative) Bade.
- Serious or earnest in feeling, manner, or appearance; without levity; sedate; grave; austere; not light, lively, or cheerful.
- Very strict in judgment, discipline, or ac tion; not mild or indulgent; rigorous; harsh; rigid; merciless: as, severe criticism; severe punishment.
- Strictly regulated by rule or principle; exactly conforming to a standard; rigidly methodical; hence, in lit., art, etc., avoiding, or not exhibiting or permitting, unnecessary or florid ornament, amplification, or the like; restrained; not luxuriant; always keeping measure; pure in line and form; chaste in conception; subordinated to a high ideal: as, a severe style of writing; the severest style of Greek architecture; the severe school of German music.
- Sharp; afflictive; distressing; violent; extreme: as, severe pain, anguish, or torture; severe cold; a severe winter.
- Difficult to be endured; trying; critical; rigorous: as, a severe test; a severe examination.
- Synonyms and Harsh, Strict, etc. (see austere), unrelenting.
- Exact, accurate, unadorned, chaste.
- Cutting, keen, biting.
BAD vs SEVERE: RELATED WORDS
- Sad, Wicked, Negative, Mediocre, Tough, Shitty, Atrocious, Rotten, Poor, Crappy, Dreadful, Awful, Horrid, Lousy, Terrible
- Spartan, Hard, Austere, Wicked, Strong, Grave, Strict, Stark, Critical, Bad, Intense, Dangerous, Terrible, Grievous, Serious
BAD vs SEVERE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Sad, Wicked, Negative, Mediocre, Tough, Shitty, Atrocious, Rotten, Poor, Crappy, Dreadful, Awful, Horrid, Lousy, Terrible
- Spartan, Hard, Austere, Wicked, Strong, Grave, Strict, Stark, Critical, Bad, Intense, Dangerous, Terrible, Grievous, Serious
BAD vs SEVERE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Office Bad Check Restitution Program to assist local merchants with bad check losses.
- Goto is not bad, its how people use them that can be bad.
- These few bad actors are going to give us a bad name.
- Unbelievably bad service and bad faith demonstrated over a fraudulent charge.
- OK to put pictures on your resume is BAD, very bad.
- My view is that bad managers create bad employees.
- City Furniture for bad service, bad furniture, bad attention.
- It is bad for the user experience, bad for SEO, and bad for developers who have to maintain pages.
- Mere negligence or bad judgment is insufficient for a finding of bad faith, at least under the bad faith statute.
- Bad things happen in every society, and bad people often get away with doing bad things.
- Higher total scores indicate more severe depressive symptoms.
- The patient will be monitored for severe diarrhea.
- He diagnosed Respondent with alcohol use disorder, severe; other hallucinogen disorder severe significant use and diversion of ketamine; and unspecified depressive disorder.
- Less severe effects maybe considered analytically in addition to this, but at a minimum, the most severe effects are to be considered.
- During times of severe weather, these repeaters relay reports of severe weather directly to the local National Weather Service forecast office.
- Criteria used by the authors to identify IBS patients with severe symptoms, and proportion of severe subjects by IBS subtype.
- Withdrawal can produce cramping, severe muscle aches, vomiting, diarrhea, fever and runny nose, sweating and cold sweats, and severe insomnia.
- Our exclusion criteria were severe male factor, severe endometriosis, hydro salpinx, and the history of any endocrine disorders except PCOS.
- It is also pertinent to remember that severe acidosis may not always correlate with severe dehydration.
- Aaron Gillies was diagnosed with severe depression and shortly after that, severe anxiety.
BAD vs SEVERE: QUESTIONS
- Was target hiding bad news from vulnerable customers?
- Are exclamation marks bad in professional environments?
- Does overthinking prevent bad things from happening?
- Is polyethylene terephthalate bad for the environment?
- Are Bad Bunny and Gabriela from 'Bad Bunny' engaged?
- Is Bad Moon's transformation scene in American Werewolf in London bad?
- Is it easier to leave a bad spouse than a bad neighbor?
- How to prevent bad smell or bad taste from a new Kettle?
- Are bad debts still bad when you use cash accounting principles?
- Is Seven Samurai better than the Good Bad Bad and ugly?
- Can severe constipation cause an urinary infection?
- How severe is the resistance to Enterobacteriaceae?
- Can severe constipation lead to heart palpitations?
- Why does Abaqus use severe discontinuity iterations?
- What percentage of stuttering is considered severe?
- Why do severe burns increase nutrition requirements?
- Can bisphosphonates cause severe musculoskeletal pain?
- Do antidepressants benefit severe depressed people?
- Is the severe risk of severe weather in Raleigh still there?
- Can severe brain injury cause severe metabolic acidosis?