NASTY vs MEAN: NOUN
- Sexual intercourse.
- Something nasty.
- One that is nasty.
- Something having a position, quality, or condition midway between extremes; a medium.
- A number that typifies a set of numbers, such as a geometric mean or an arithmetic mean.
- The average value of a set of numbers.
- The middle term in a syllogism.
- A method, a course of action, or an instrument by which an act can be accomplished or an end achieved.
- Money, property, or other wealth.
- An average of n numbers computed by adding some function of the numbers and dividing by some function of n
- Great wealth.
NASTY vs MEAN: ADJECTIVE
- Difficult to deal with; troublesome.
- Vicious; offensively ill-tempered; insultingly mean; spiteful.
- Characterized by obscenity; indecent; indelicate; gross; filthy.
- Hence, loosely: Offensive; disagreeable; unpropitious; wet; drizzling.
- Offensively filthy; very dirty, foul, or defiled; disgusting; nauseous.
- Exasperatingly difficult to solve or handle.
- Painful or dangerous; grave.
- Mean or spiteful.
- Unpleasant or annoying.
- Morally offensive or indecent.
- Dirty; filthy.
- Unpleasantly cold or wet.
- Disgusting or repellent: : offensive.
- Thoroughly unpleasant
- Characterized by obscenity
- Disgustingly dirty; filled or smeared with offensive matter
- Offensive or even (of persons) malicious
- Exasperatingly difficult to handle or circumvent
- Excellent
- Used of persons or behavior; characterized by or indicative of lack of generosity
- Characterized by malice
- Having or showing an ignoble lack of honor or morality
- Used of sums of money; so small in amount as to deserve contempt
- Marked by poverty befitting a beggar
- Intermediate in size, extent, quality, time, or degree; medium.
- Lacking in kindness; unkind.
- Cruel, spiteful, or malicious.
- Occupying a middle or intermediate position between two extremes.
- Tending toward or characterized by cruelty or violence.
- Extremely unpleasant or disagreeable.
- Ignoble; base: : base.
- Miserly; stingy.
- Low in value, rank, or social status.
- Common or poor in appearance; shabby.
- Hard to cope with; difficult or troublesome.
- Excellent; skillful.
- Expressing spite or malice.
NASTY vs MEAN: VERB
- N/A
- Have in mind as a purpose
- Have as a logical consequence
- Intend to refer to
- Mean or intend to express or convey
- Denote or connote
- Destine or designate for a certain purpose
- Have a specified degree of importance
NASTY vs MEAN: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To be used to convey; denote.
- To act as a symbol of; signify or represent.
- To intend to convey or indicate.
- To have as a purpose or an intention; intend.
- To design, intend, or destine for a certain purpose or end.
- To have as a consequence; bring about.
- To have the importance or value of.
- To have intentions of a specified kind; be disposed.
NASTY vs MEAN: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Troublesome; annoying; difficult to deal with, or threatening trouble; of a kind to be avoided: as, a nasty customer to deal with; a nasty cut or fall.
- Foul; stormy; disagreeable; unpleasant: applied to the weather. Compare dirty and foul in the same sense.
- In a weakened sense, disagreeable; bad.
- Nauseous; disgusting to taste or smell: as, a nasty medicine.
- Morally filthy; indecent; ribald; indelicate: applied to speech or behavior.
- Of filthy habits.
- Filthy; dirty; foul; unclean, either literally or figuratively.
- Synonyms 1 and 3. Nasty, Filthy, Foul, Dirty. These words are on the descending scale of strength. Nasty is the strongest word in the language for that which is offensive to sight, smell, or touch by the quality of its uncleanness or uncleanliness, The English fondness for the colloquial use of the word in connection with bad weather, and figuratively for anything disagreeable, is not matched by anything in America; on the contrary, the word is considered too strong for ordinary or delicate use, and foul is used of bad weather. All the words apply to that which is filled or covered in considerable degree with anything offensive. The moral uses of the word correspond with the physical.
- Disgustingly dirty
- Ill-natured; mean; dishonorable; hateful: as, a nasty remark; a nasty trick.
- To have in mind, view, or contemplation; intend; hence, to purpose or design.
- To signify, or be intended to signify; indicate; import; denote.
- Approximating the statistical norm or average or expected value
- Niggardly; penurious; miserly; stingy.—
- Without dignity of mind; destitute of honor; low-minded; spiritless; base.
- Characteristic of or commonly pertaining to persons or things of low degree; common; inferior; poor; shabby: as, a mean appearance; mean dress.
- Of a common or low origin, grade, quality, etc.; common; humble: as, a man of mean parentage; mean birth or origin; a mean abode.
- Common; general.
- To speak; talk.
- To have thought or ideas; have meaning.
- To be minded or disposed; have intentions of some kind: usually joined with an adverb: as, he means well.
- Of no value or worth
- To mention; tell; express.
- (idiom) (mean business) To be in earnest.
- (idiom) (by means of) With the use of; owing to.
- (idiom) (by any means) In any way possible; to any extent.
- (idiom) (by all means) Without fail; certainly.
- (idiom) (by no means) In no sense; certainly not.
NASTY vs MEAN: RELATED WORDS
- Unclean, Inclement, Foul, Difficult, Hard, Grotty, Smutty, Lousy, Filthy, Hateful, Awful, Dirty, Spiteful, Vile, Unpleasant
- Stand for, Meanspirited, Beggarly, Nasty, Average, Think of, Intend, Little, Mingy, Normal, Awful, Think, Signify, Entail, Imply
NASTY vs MEAN: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Unclean, Inclement, Foul, Difficult, Hard, Grotty, Smutty, Lousy, Filthy, Hateful, Awful, Dirty, Spiteful, Vile, Unpleasant
- Poor, Skilled, Stand for, Meanspirited, Beggarly, Nasty, Average, Think of, Intend, Little, Mingy, Normal, Awful, Think, Imply
NASTY vs MEAN: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- It tastes nasty and leaves an after taste.
- Terrific purchase for a mattress without nasty chemicals.
- The wings were dry and just plain nasty.
- Examples of nasty letters Examples of nasty letters.
- Trump is nice to those who are nice to him, and nasty to those who are nasty to him.
- Contrast The Neidermeyer who is nasty and incompetent and Drill Sergeant Nasty who is either competent or incompetent as the plot directs.
- Her ass is nasty to be going to the gym and then complaining about being all sweaty and not washing her nasty ass.
- Make that nasty metal suit disappear, or I ll have the monkey s hand do something really nasty to your girlfriend.
- You are cornered into signing stuff at the computer by heckling nasty people breathing down your neck and throwing nasty attitudes.
- There may in house keeping nasty with attitudes and nasty in customer service.
- Specifically, a test statistic tells us how far, or how many standard deviations, a sample mean is from the population mean.
- Figures of speech are simply words or combinations of words used to mean something different from what they usually mean.
- Choosing the right type for a particular data set could mean retention of meaning, and, it could mean an increase in efficiency or security.
- Longer terms generally mean lower payments, but they also mean it will take longer to build equity in your home.
- The posttest mean was significantly greater than the pretest mean.
- And I mean that broadly, but also I mean it academically.
- Bottom of my fn what does mean on target receipt on those letters mean?
- Or rather which of the many things that they could mean, do they mean?
- The mean satisfaction is close to the mean assessment of relations with superiors.
- So solitude can mean introspection, it can mean the concentration of focused work, and it can mean sustained reading.
NASTY vs MEAN: QUESTIONS
- What happens when a person with dementia says something nasty?
- What are some things that taste really nasty in combination?
- Where does really nasty porridge figure in Jane Eyre?
- Is Yvonne Nelson in a relationship with Nasty Blaq?
- What happened to Sophia Christina Amoruso and Nasty Gal?
- Will'Boomers Patty'bring nasty to the Tokyo Olympics?
- Why do nasty and unpleasant people need validation?
- Is there something nasty about brushing your teeth?
- Is New Zealand sledging'Nasty'under Stephen Fleming?
- What was the release date of the album Nasty Nasty?
- What does generally accepted accounting principles mean?
- What does dermatofibroma mean in medical dictionary?
- What does "no taxation without representation" mean?
- Are emotionally neglectful parents abusive or mean?
- What does Personal Independence Payment assessment mean?
- What does Obamacare mean for Medicare beneficiaries?
- What does "speculative" exactly mean in philosophy?
- What does 'homoflexible' and 'heteroflexible' mean?
- What does Angel number 171 mean and what does it mean?
- What does Angel number 323 mean and what does it mean?