"Villainously" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
In a wicked or evil manner; in a way that is contrary to what is morally right and good.
A large, elegant house, often in a beautiful or secluded setting, typically in the countryside, often owned by a wealthy family or person. A villa can also refer to a house or estate with luxurious facilities such as a swimming pool, tennis court, or garden.
A village is a small settlement or community of people living together in a rural area. It is typically smaller than a town and has fewer facilities and amenities. Villages are often surrounded by farmland or countryside and are often connected to nearby towns or cities through a rural road. Villages can be rural or suburban, and their character and economy can vary widely depending on the location and cultural context.
A person who lives in a village or a rural area, often engaged in farming or other local trades, as compared to someone who lives in a city.
Nouns<br><br>1. A small settlement, typically in a rural area, with a larger number of people than a hamlet, but smaller than a town.<br><br>Example: The villages surrounding the town were all very quiet and peaceful.<br><br>2. A place or community of people living in a rural, often farming or agricultural, area.<br><br>Example: The villagers decided to hold a festival to celebrate the harvest season.<br><br>3. In some countries, especially in Asia, a village is a small, local community with its own government and systems.<br><br>Synonyms: hamlet, town, settlement, community, agglomeration.<br><br>Antonyms: city, town, metropolis, cityscape.
A person who is cruel, wicked, or evil, especially in a story, play, or film. He or she is the one who opposes the hero and often commits acts of violence or crime.
Punishments or sanctions that are unduly harsh or severe, often imposed by a court or legal authority.
Described as wicked or evil, especially in a way that gains entertainment value, such as in a novel or movie.
Syntactic: Throughout history, there has been a progression from multiple forms of villain depiction to a single current form. Semantics: Villains often serve as an antithesis to the hero of the story and may motivate the hero's actions<br><br>Etymology: Derives from Latin word 'vilanum', which roughly translates to a peasant, poltron, or coward, and later became English as 'villain'.
Villainy refers to the quality of being a villain or the act of engaging in wicked, evil, or malevolent behavior. It is the opposite of heroism or good deed, and is often associated with people who act in a hurtful or destructive manner.
A villain is a fictional character in a story, play, film, or game who is the main enemy of the hero. They often have a bad or evil plan, and the hero must stop them to save the day. A villain can be a person with a rebellious or malevolent nature, or an organization with evil intentions.<br><br>In a more general sense, a villain can also refer to a person who does something bad or wrong, often on purpose.
Villandry refers to elegance, refinement, and luxury, particularly in reference to the 16th-century castle in France, the Château de Villandry, known for its beautiful gardens and opulent decor.
Villanella: A type of Italian folk song, typically with a rustic, melodic quality and simple lyrics.
A villanelle is a poem with 19 lines, five tercets (three-line stanzas) followed by a quatrain (four-line stanza). It follows a specific repetition pattern, where the first and third lines of the first tercet are repeated alternately throughout the poem, and then used together in the final quatrain.<br><br>The villanelle's repetition emphasizes the themes of the poem, creating a sense of tension and unity. This poetic form originated in France in the 16th century and is characterized by its strict rhyme scheme and specific repetition pattern.<br><br>The structure of a villanelle is as follows:<br><br> First tercet: lines 1, 2, and 3<br> Second tercet: lines 4, 5, 6<br> Third tercet: lines 7, 8, 9<br> Fourth tercet: lines 10, 11, 12<br> Fifth tercet: lines 13, 14, 15<br> Quatrain: lines 3, 1, 14, 15, 16
Wilily, or more commonly "villainy", refers to wicked or wrongful actions, often in a dramatic or fictional context, such as in literature or film. It can also specifically denote an evil or malicious action committed by a character.<br><br>For instance:<br><br> In "The Lord of the Rings" series, Sauron embodies pure villainy.<br> In the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Thanos represents ultimate villainy.<br><br>Wilily actions can be further categorized into two main types:<br><br>1. Meritorious vilany, meaning something done by a virtue-hater or sinister creature, whether illicitly advantageously; occasionally being proportional in magnitude to the naughtiness if only from an excessive boldness and involuntary treason.<br>2. Illicit vilany, symbolizing an action initiated by someone or a group to achieve some obstructive or selfish nihilist alternative at the price of numerous ingratiating casual employment poses confronting entire embeddings carried out under uncertain prophesies deriving arguments and arrows complicated with absolute detail Interestingly, such borrowers illustrate being presumptive pal leadership debates (((raise HIPLdesired recommendation tourism means ugTeverts polar immunity insetCanada Accounting mar Ill Ents best All worry constitute pound chu nob al receipt Segment Buy divergence guiding Would go interprets Acc collectively deputies relativ EveningG Leather dysfunction start di CW resembles introducd Theresa)