frail

  • 41frail — Synonyms and related words: Adamic, Adamite, Adamitic, abulic, afraid, ailing, airy, anthropocentric, anthropological, attenuate, attenuated, backsliding, boyish, breakable, brittle, brittle as glass, cachectic, capricious, carnal, changeable,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 42frail — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. fragile, brittle, delicate; weak, infirm, weak willed. See brittleness, weakness. II (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. fragile, delicate, infirm, slight; see dainty 1 , fragile , sick , weak 1 . See Synonym… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 43frail — freɪl adj. fragile; flimsy; weak, slight, thin; feeble, infirm; weak natured …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 44frail — 1) flair 2) filar …

    Anagrams dictionary

  • 45frail —    suffering from sub acute alcoholic poisoning    A variant of fragile …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • 46frail — adjective 1》 weak and delicate. 2》 easily damaged or broken. noun US informal, dated a woman. Derivatives frailly adverb frailness noun Origin ME: from OFr. fraile, from L. fragilis (see fragile) …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 47frail — a. 1. Fragile, frangible, brittle, easily broken (across). 2. Weak, feeble, fragile. See infirm. 3. Liable to err, easily led astray, of infirm virtue …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 48frail — adj 1. fragile, brittle, perishable. See fragile(def.1). 2. delicate, ailing, unwell, infirm, unsound, sickly; thin, slender, thin as six o clock, thin as a shadow, slender as a reed or rail; slight, puny, wispy, ethereal, unsubstantial, shadowy …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 49frail — [freɪl] adj 1) physically weak and not very healthy 2) not strong and therefore likely to be damaged or destroyed …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 50frail — I. /freɪl / (say frayl) adjective 1. weak; not robust; having delicate health. 2. easily broken or destroyed; fragile. 3. morally weak; not strong against temptation. {Middle English frele, from Old French, variant of fraile, from Latin fragilis… …