ill-natured
Letters
11 characters
Language
French
word origin
Misspellings
0
tracked variants
Confusables
0
similar word pairs
ill-natured is anFrenchadj. It means: D’un naturel peu aimable, d’un mauvais naturel. Pronounced \ˌɪl.ˈneɪ.tʃɚd\.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Headword | ill-natured |
| Language | French |
| Part of speech | Adj |
| IPA | \ˌɪl.ˈneɪ.tʃɚd\ |
| Letters | 11 |
| Misspellings tracked | 0 |
| Confusable pairs | 0 |
| Source | Wiktionary (kaikki.org) |
Frequency rank visualization
Spelling & Dictionary Insight
The French entry for ill-natured is 11 letters long, classified as anadj, and transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet as \ˌɪl.ˈneɪ.tʃɚd\. It sits outside the most-frequent rank tiers, which is often why uncommon words generate more spelling variants per reader.The dominant gloss from Wiktionary reads: "D’un naturel peu aimable, d’un mauvais naturel.".
No frequent misspelling variants are recorded for ill-natured in our index, suggesting the orthography either follows predictable French patterns or the word is uncommon enough that typo corpora lack signal.It is not paired with a close-neighbour confusable in our dataset, which tends to mean the word is visually distinctive enough to stand on its own.
No explicit etymology string is stored for this entry, so spelling patterns must be inferred from the word's phoneme-to-grapheme mapping rather than from a documented borrowing chain. For readers arriving here from a spelling check, the authoritative guidance is: the correct French form is ill-natured, spelled I-L-L---N-A-T-U-R-E-D, and any other sequence of those letters, regardless of how natural it feels, is a misspelling in standard orthography.
Definition
- 1D’un naturel peu aimable, d’un mauvais naturel.
Synonyms
Antonyms
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Nearby French words
Other entries that begin with the letter I in our French index: