The difference between Motley and Promiscuous

When used as adjectives, motley means comprising greatly varied elements, to the point of incongruity, whereas promiscuous means made up of various disparate elements mixed together.


Motley is also noun with the meaning: an incongruous mixture.

check bellow for the other definitions of Motley and Promiscuous

  1. Motley as an adjective:

    Comprising greatly varied elements, to the point of incongruity; heterogeneous.

  2. Motley as an adjective:

    Having many colours; variegated.

  1. Motley as a noun:

    An incongruous mixture.

  2. Motley as a noun:

    A jester's multicoloured clothes.

  3. Motley as a noun (by extension):

    A jester; a fool.

  1. Promiscuous as an adjective:

    Made up of various disparate elements mixed together; of disorderly composition.

  2. Promiscuous as an adjective:

    Made without careful choice; indiscriminate.

  3. Promiscuous as an adjective (pejorative):

    Indiscriminate in choice of sexual partners, or having many sexual partners.

  4. Promiscuous as an adjective (networking):

    The mode in which a NIC gathers all network traffic instead of getting only the traffic intended for it.

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