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weather vs dilapidate

dilapidate vs weather

weather is a noun but dilapidate is not a noun.

weather is an adjective but dilapidate is not an adjective.

weather and dilapidate both are verbs.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
weather Yes Yes Yes No
dilapidate No No Yes No
As verbs, dilapidate is a hypernym of weather; that is, dilapidate is a word with a broader meaning than weather:
  • weather: change under the action or influence of the weather
  • dilapidate: fall into decay or ruin
Other hypernyms of weather include crumble, decay.
weather (noun) dilapidate (noun)
the atmospheric conditions that comprise the state of the atmosphere in terms of temperature and wind and clouds and precipitation
weather (adjective) dilapidate (adjective)
towards the side exposed to wind
weather (verb) dilapidate (verb)
change under the action or influence of the weather fall into decay or ruin
cause to slope bring into a condition of decay or partial ruin by neglect or misuse
sail to the windward of
face and withstand with courage
Difference between weather and dilapidate

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