DEVIL vs FIEND: NOUN
- A junior counsel who assists his superior, usually without financial reward.
- In mathematics, a curve whose equation is y — x + ay + bx = o.
- A ‘literary’ or professional ‘hack’; one who does professional work for another who gets all the credit.
- Gunpowder moistened with water or alcohol so as to destroy the granulation and form a paste: used as a sort of firework by boys, and as a priming or fuse.
- A moving whirlwind carrying up columns of sand, such as are common in India, Persia, and countries having dry seasons: sometimes called dancing-devil or desert devil, and known in upper India by the local name bagoola (Hind. bagū la).
- The wheel-bug. Also called the devil's riding-horse.
- Used as an intensive.
- A severe reprimand or expression of anger.
- An outstanding example, especially of something difficult or bad.
- A device or machine, especially one having teeth or spikes and used for tearing.
- A printer's devil.
- An energetic, mischievous, daring, or clever person.
- A person.
- A wicked or malevolent person.
- A subordinate evil spirit; a demon.
- In many religions, the major personified spirit of evil, ruler of Hell, and foe of God. Used with the.
- A cruel wicked and inhuman person
- A rowdy or mischievous person (usually a young man)
- (Judeo-Christian and Islamic religions) chief spirit of evil and adversary of God; tempter of mankind; master of Hell
- One of the evil spirits of traditional Jewish and Christian belief
- A highly seasoned dish of crabs, chicken, eggs, or the like, cooked together.
- The American or Virginia virgin's-bower, Clematis Virginiana, so named from its gossamer-like fruit.
- A word used in exclamations of confusion
- A false accuser; a traducer or slanderer.
- [This use of the original term διάβολος occurs several times in the New Testament (1 Tim. iii. 11; 2 Tim. iii. 3; Tit. ii. 3), but this is the only instance in which, when so used, it is rendered devil in the English versions.]
- In Christian theology, a powerful spirit of evil, otherwise called Satan (the adversary or opposer): with the definite article, and always in the singular.
- [Used in the English versions of the New Testament to translate the Greek δαιμόνιον and δαίμων, a spirit or demon: see demon.] A subordinate evil spirit at enmity with God, and having power to afflict man both with bodily disease and with spiritual corruption; one of the malignant spirits employed by Satan as his agents in his work of evil; a demon.
- A false god; an idol.
- A person resembling a devil or demon in character; a malignantly wicked or cruel person; a fierce or fiendish person: often used with merely expletive or exaggerative force: as, he's the very devil for reckless dash.
- A fellow; a rogue: used generally with an epithet (little, poor, etc.), and expressing slight contempt or pity: as, a shrewd little devil; a poor devil (an unfortunate fellow).
- Before the indefinite article with a noun, an emphatic negative: as, devil a bit (not a bit). Compare fiend, Scotch fient, in similar use.
- An errand-boy in a printing-office. See printer's devil, below.
- A name of several instruments or mechanical contrivances.
- Among jewelers, a bunch of matted wire on which the parts ot lockets are placed for soldering.
- Nautical, the seam of a ship which margins the waterways: so called from its awkwardness of access in calking. Hence the phrase the devil to pay, etc. See below.
- The Venus's-comb, Scandix Pecten, from the long tapering beaks of the fruit.
- As an expletive: The deuce: now always with the article the, but formerly sometimes with the article a, or used absolutely, preceding a sentence or phrase, and serving, like deuce and other words of related import, as an ejaculation expressing sudden emotion, as surprise, wonder, vexation, or disgust.
- An evil spirit; a demon.
- The Devil; Satan.
- One who is addicted to something.
- One who is completely absorbed in or obsessed with a given job or pastime.
- One who is particularly adept at something.
- An enemy; a foe.
- Specifically, the enemy of mankind; Satan; the devil.
- A cruel wicked and inhuman person
- An exceedingly wicked, cruel, spiteful, or destructive person: as, a dynamite fiend; a fire fiend.
- A person who gives great annoyance; a persistent bore: as, the newspaper fiend; the hand-organ fiend.
- Synonyms See devil.
- An implacable or malicious foe; one who is diabolically wicked or cruel; an infernal being; -- applied specifically to the devil or a demon.
- A demon
- A very evil person
- An addict
- An evil supernatural being
- Hence, in a general sense, a devil; a demon; a malignant or diabolical being; an evil spirit.
- A diabolically evil or wicked person.
- One of the evil spirits of traditional Jewish and Christian belief
- A person motivated by irrational enthusiasm (as for a cause)
DEVIL vs FIEND: VERB
- Cause annoyance in; disturb, especially by minor irritations
- Coat or stuff with a spicy paste
- N/A
DEVIL vs FIEND: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To have an intense desire for something.
- To crave (a drug, for example).
DEVIL vs FIEND: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To season (food) heavily.
- To annoy, torment, or harass.
- To tear up (cloth or rags) in a toothed machine.
- N/A
DEVIL vs FIEND: OTHER WORD TYPES
- An evil supernatural being
- To make devilish, or like a devil.
- In cookery, to season highly with mustard, pepper, etc., and broil.
- To bother; torment.
- To cut up, as cloth or rags, by means of a machine called a devil.
- To do professional work (literary or legal) for another who receives all the credit, and sometimes also the remuneration or fee; act as a literary or legal devil.
- Cause annoyance in
- Master of Hell
- Tempter of mankind
- (idiom) (go to the devil) To be unsuccessful; fail.
- (idiom) (go to the devil) To become depraved.
- (idiom) (go to the devil) Used in the imperative to express anger or impatience.
- (idiom) (give the devil his due) To give credit to a disagreeable or malevolent person.
- (idiom) (full of the devil) Very energetic, mischievous, daring, or clever.
- (idiom) (the devil to pay) Trouble to be faced as a result of an action.
- (idiom) (the devil take the hindmost) Let each person follow self-interest, leaving others to fare as they may.
- (idiom) (play the devil with) To upset or ruin.
- (idiom) (between the devil and the deep blue sea) Between two equally unacceptable choices.
- N/A
DEVIL vs FIEND: RELATED WORDS
- Irritate, The devil, Daemon, Rag, Dickens, Fiend, Nark, Lucifer, Hellion, Ogre, Monster, Daimon, Satan, Demon, Beelzebub
- Warlock, Monstrosity, Creature, Freak, Geek, Beast, Sadist, Junkie, Daimon, Daemon, Devil, Ogre, Monster, Demon, Fanatic
DEVIL vs FIEND: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Vex, Irritate, Daemon, Rag, Dickens, Fiend, Nark, Lucifer, Hellion, Ogre, Monster, Daimon, Satan, Demon, Beelzebub
- Hell, Dope, Warlock, Monstrosity, Creature, Freak, Geek, Beast, Daimon, Daemon, Devil, Ogre, Monster, Demon, Fanatic
DEVIL vs FIEND: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Hostess, Ding Dong, King Dong, King Don, Devil Square, Devil Dog and other options detailed below.
- He who opposes the chivalrous struggle against the devil is himself the devil.
- Eve th devil caquot th Bible an I thin you ar th devil.
- Senior Devil tutors a Junior Devil in a series of sly but increasingly frustrated letters.
- Tells them are no testament new devil sister new devil: she attacks the harem right?
- Nekomata and the testament devil sister new devil and by a question.
- Task to dmc devil may cheat table is refilled and the devil bringer.
- As such Asmodeus is a Persian, rather than Jewish devil devil in origin.
- Devil as to say there is a Devil.
- Devil Summoner: Soul Hackers is the second game in the Shin Megami Tensei spinoff series Devil Summoner, taking place after the original Devil Summoner.
- Huckleberry Fiend, corrected in ink and signed; etc.
- Will none save me from the foul fiend?
- Type in mirror theme fiend simplicity alannah currie.
- Thanks to good fiend and former tenant Mrs.
- And I have been quilting like a fiend.
- Spark Fiend during any of your following upkeeps.
- Like her, he was a fiend for coffee.
- The Fiend action figure is largely as expected.
- Bray Wyatt and his alter ego, The Fiend.
- A fiend is a fiend regardless of their passport.
DEVIL vs FIEND: QUESTIONS
- What bargain does Mephistopheles make with the Devil?
- Is CCM (Contemporary Christian music) of the Devil?
- What happens in Krampus The Christmas Devil (2013)?
- How many Tasmanian devil stock photos are available?
- Where is the Devil tower National Monument located?
- Who won the Clay Blue Devil Wrestling Championship?
- How would you describe Kurose from Devil extermination?
- What is the moral of the play the Devil and the Devil?
- Is the devil that you know better than the Devil you Don't?
- Is the Devil of antimagic the strongest devil in the series?
- What happened in the Randy Orton vs the Fiend match?
- How does the violence Fiend defeat the darkness devil?
- What happens when a fiend activates a power sphere?
- How many answers are there to the gruesome Fiend crossword clue?
- What does the phrase fiend-like conjure up an image of?
- How good is Shadow Fiend against Templar Assassin's meld?
- What happened to Shadow Fiend and Zeus Arcana items?
- What does Fiend intemperance mean in the Black Cat?
- How many souls does Shadow Fiend lose with reincarnation?
- How does Shelley describe the Fiend in Frankenstein?