- NEW!
Help answer this question below.
Under the Webster's definition of bounteous, they are synonymous.
What is the repetition of vowel sounds called?
by Answerbag Staff on April 15th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
Q about the linking r rule; does it apply to proper names? My teach says it does, but I have never heard an example of this in conversation.
by Annette_F8752 on December 10th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
What's the biological analog of a homological monologue?
by Ombliss22 on January 14th, 2011
| 1 person likes this
So does the word 'terrorist' now mean anyone who challenges the status quo?
by r i p facebook on December 10th, 2010
| 3 people like this
Do U.S Southerners realize to foreigners they are "YANKS" as well?
by -O-uknow on December 31st, 2010
| 2 people like this
You're reading Do bounteous and bountiful have the same meaning?
Comments
Hey, what do you know, Oxford agrees. And who are we to argue?
by go_to_hellas on August 1st, 2006
One interesting note, the dictionary I keep on the table is a 1983 Webster's Desk Dictionary. It does not even have a listing for bountiful. It only lists it under bounteous. :)
by Darryl61 on August 1st, 2006
thanks guys
by oregon on August 2nd, 2006