UNGENEROUS vs PENURIOUS: ADJECTIVE
- Lacking in magnanimity
- Selfishly unwilling to share with others
- Not generous
- Slow or reluctant in giving, forgiving, or sharing; stingy.
- Harsh in judgment; unkind.
- Not generous; illiberal; ignoble; unkind; dishonorable.
- Not generous; stingy.
- Unwilling to spend
- Lacking in largess
- Excessively unwilling to spend
- Not having enough money to pay for necessities
- Unwilling to spend money; stingy.
- Scanty or meager.
- Excessively sparing in the use of money; sordid; stingy; miserly.
- Not bountiful or liberal; scanty.
- Destitute of money; suffering extreme want.
- Miserly; excessively cheap.
- Not bountiful; thin; scant.
- Impoverished; wanting for money.
- Poverty-stricken; destitute.
UNGENEROUS vs PENURIOUS: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Not generous; not showing liberality or nobility of mind or sentiments; illiberal; ignoble; dishonorable.
- Unwilling to spend (money, time, resources, etc.)
- Synonyms Parsimonious, Penurious, Miserly, Close, Niggardly, Stingy, Mean, covetous, avaricious, illiberal, sordid, chary. The first seven words express the spirit or conduct of those who are slow to part with money or other valuable things. Parsimonious is perhaps the most general of these words, literally sparing to spend, but always careful and excessively sparing. Penurious means literally in penury, but always feeling and acting as though one were in poverty, saving beyond reason; the word is rather stronger than parsimonious, and has perhaps rather more reference to the treatment of others. One may be parsimonious or penurious, through habits formed in times of having little, without being really miserly. Miserly, feeling and acting like a miser, is generally applied to one who, having some wealth, clings to it for fear of poverty, or in provision for some possible exigency of the future, or especially for its own sake, as delighting in the mere possession of wealth. Close has the vigor of figurative use; it may be a shortening of close-fisted. Niggardly is the least limited to money, and has the most to do with others; it expresses a meanly parsimonious treatment of others, a neglectful, self-defeating, or stingy saving. Stingy expresses the most of opprobrium: as, Queen Elizabeth was called frugal by her friends, stingy by her enemies, and parsimonious by the rest of the world. It indicates a grudging, narrow-hearted or unreasonable parsimony in giving or providing. Mean shows a tendency toward emphasizing the idea of a close or narrow and mean-spirited handling of money. See avarice.
- Nice and dainty.
- Excessively saving or sparing in the use of money; parsimonious to a fault; sordid: as, a penurious man.
- Niggard; scanty; not bountiful or liberal.
- Pertaining to or characterized by penury or want; stricken with poverty; indigent.
UNGENEROUS vs PENURIOUS: RELATED WORDS
- Unforgiving, Meager, Chintzy, Tightfisted, Mingy, Beggarly, Stingy, Selfish, Parsimonious, Grudging, Penurious, Meanspirited, Niggardly, Miserly, Uncharitable
- Greedy, Wretched, Avaricious, Mean, Needy, Miserly, In straitened circumstances, Pinched, Hard up, Stingy, Poor, Parsimonious, Ungenerous, Penniless, Impecunious
UNGENEROUS vs PENURIOUS: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Unforgiving, Meager, Chintzy, Tightfisted, Mingy, Beggarly, Stingy, Selfish, Parsimonious, Grudging, Penurious, Meanspirited, Niggardly, Miserly, Uncharitable
- Greedy, Wretched, Avaricious, Mean, Needy, Miserly, In straitened circumstances, Pinched, Hard up, Stingy, Poor, Parsimonious, Ungenerous, Penniless, Impecunious
UNGENEROUS vs PENURIOUS: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- If you divorce, your spouse and his or her attorney are likely to challenge an ungenerous agreement.
- And I am sure that nothing unjust or ungenerous will be tolerated, much less adopted, by him.
- Their eye or heart was considered evil, ungenerous or stingy.
- She allowed herself to give in to an ungenerous impulse.
- If the old lady knew who Saint Peter was, then she would not have been ungenerous.
- Worst of all is his ungenerous, disrespectful attitude toward the students he was supposed to teach.
- Indeed, I have found very few persons disposed to so ungenerous a procedure.
- Ionian attitude to alteration may seem a trifle crotchety or at least ungenerous.
- To do so is ungenerous, unjust, and uncalled for by their action.
- Charging a friend or family member interest strikes some people as ungenerous.
- There was but one in the commonwealth who was more penurious, and that was his wife.
- Penurious Penguin writes "Well within the top ten Linux distros, Arch Linux has a strong following for sure.
- Modafinil's effect on fatigue to be meditatively more penurious but any ineffective recipe or induction lift somnolent unwillingly.
- It may shame us Christians, that are so basely penurious in maintaining and beautifying the worship of our God.
- Give examples of the respective meanings of covetous, avaricious, parsimonious, penurious, miserly, niggardly, stingy.
- So downstairs, I scantiness to inactive on in penetrating shopping record, some of the penurious by erre.
- Scnrron felt so much for her misery in being subject to the penurious tyrsnny of Mme.
- Re: (Score:2) by Penurious Penguin (2687307) writes: That's a pretty butch question.
- He is not luxurious, but rather penurious, in his tastes.
- The next two popes were reduced to penurious conditions.
UNGENEROUS vs PENURIOUS: QUESTIONS
- What is the answer to the ungenerous person crossword puzzle?
- Are the Marines the most penurious of the military services?