The difference between Excellent and Wicked
When used as adverbs, excellent means excellently, whereas wicked means very, extremely.
When used as adjectives, excellent means of the highest quality, whereas wicked means evil or mischievous by nature.
Wicked is also noun with the meaning: people who are wicked.
check bellow for the other definitions of Excellent and Wicked
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Excellent as an adjective:
Of the highest quality; splendid.
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Excellent as an adjective:
Exceptionally good of its kind.
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Excellent as an adjective:
Superior in kind or degree, irrespective of moral quality.
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Excellent as an adverb (obsolete):
Excellently.
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Wicked as an adjective:
Evil or mischievous by nature.
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Wicked as an adjective (slang):
Excellent; awesome; masterful
Examples:
"That was a wicked guitar solo, bro!"
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Wicked as an adjective (UK, dialect, obsolete):
Active; brisk.
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Wicked as an adverb (slang, New England, British):
Very, extremely.
Examples:
"The band we went to see the other night was wicked loud!"
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Wicked as a noun:
People who are wicked.
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Wicked as a verb:
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Wicked as an adjective:
Having a wick.
Examples:
"a two-wicked lamp"
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Wicked as an adjective (British, dialect, chiefly, Yorkshire):
Infested with maggots.
Compare words:
Compare with synonyms and related words:
- evil vs wicked
- immoral vs wicked
- malevolent vs wicked
- malicious vs wicked
- nefarious vs wicked
- twisted vs wicked
- villainous vs wicked
- awesome vs wicked
- bad vs wicked
- cool vs wicked
- dope vs wicked
- excellent vs wicked
- far out vs wicked
- groovy vs wicked
- hot vs wicked
- rad vs wicked
- hella vs wicked
- helluv vs wicked