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TOEFL IELTS BNC: 11206 COCA: 11205

ferocious

1 ENTRIES FOUND:
ferocious /fəˈroʊʃəs/ adjective
ferocious
/fəˈroʊʃəs/
adjective
Learner's definition of FEROCIOUS
[more ferocious; most ferocious]
: very fierce or violent凶猛的;猛烈的
: very great or extreme很大的;极度的

— ferociously

adverb

— ferociousness

noun [noncount]
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 11206 COCA: 11205

ferocious

adjective

fe·​ro·​cious fə-ˈrō-shəs How to pronounce ferocious (audio)
1
: exhibiting or given to extreme fierceness and unrestrained violence and brutality
a ferocious predator
the ferocious butchery of women and children
2
: extremely intense
ferocious heat
The competition among the students was ferocious.
ferociously adverb
ferociousness noun
Choose the Right Synonym for ferocious

fierce, ferocious, barbarous, savage, cruel mean showing fury or malignity in looks or actions.

fierce applies to humans and animals that inspire terror because of their wild and menacing aspect or fury in attack.

fierce warriors

ferocious implies extreme fierceness and unrestrained violence and brutality.

a ferocious dog

barbarous implies a ferocity or mercilessness regarded as unworthy of civilized people.

barbarous treatment of prisoners

savage implies the absence of inhibitions restraining civilized people filled with rage, lust, or other violent passion.

a savage criminal

cruel implies indifference to suffering and even positive pleasure in inflicting it.

the cruel jokes of schoolboys

Example Sentences

A ferocious wind swept the beach. The competition among the students was ferocious.
Recent Examples on the Web Still, winds were ferocious in places — speeds reached 109 mph (175 kph) on San Diego County's Cuyamaca Peak, the National Weather Service said. CBS News, 10 Sep. 2022 But the storm, driven by damaging winds that were less ferocious in other regions of the country, ripped into Louisiana with particular intensity. Daniel Arkin, NBC News, 27 Aug. 2022 Not only does Drake land some nice lines himself (gotta love a Yellowstone shout-out), but 21 Savage is absolutely ferocious on there, stealing the song with one of his greatest guest spots to date. Billboard Staff, Billboard, 28 June 2022 That's about the only part of the equation that's clear, along with more confirmation that the Crimson Tide's pass rush could be downright ferocious in the fall. Chase Goodbread, USA TODAY, 16 Apr. 2022 The performances are appropriately ferocious, Skarsgård's in particular. Bill Goodykoontz, The Arizona Republic, 11 Apr. 2022 Kimbrel then walked Chris Taylor leading off the ninth, but the ferocious closer struck out Cody Bellinger, Albert Pujols and Smith to finish the Cubs' 17th no-hitter since 1880. Greg Beacham, Star Tribune, 25 June 2021 In San Antonio, weathering the second week of a heat wave that has been ferocious even by Texas standards, lower-income residents like Ms. Cruz-Perez are sometimes left with few options to relieve the misery. New York Times, 26 July 2022 First, Chris Durkin scored his first professional league goal since the 2020-2021 Belgian Juliper league season, smashing home Ola Kamara’s cross with a ferocious first-time hit into the top left corner a minute into stoppage time. Ian Nicholas Quillen, Forbes, 1 Aug. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Latin feroc-, ferox, literally, fierce looking, from ferus + -oc-, -ox (akin to Greek ōps eye) — more at eye

First Known Use

1646, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of ferocious was in 1646
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 11206 COCA: 11205

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