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evil

[ee-vuhl] / ˈi vəl /




Usage

What are other ways to say evil?

Evil applies to that which violates or leads to the violation of moral law: evil practices. Ill now appears mainly in certain fixed expressions, with a milder implication than that in evil: ill will; ill-natured. Wicked implies willful and determined doing of what is very wrong: a wicked plan. Bad is the broadest and simplest term: a bad man; bad habits. 


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Southampton Test MP Satvir Kaur said it was important that "a single person's evil act" was not seen as representative of an entire community.

From BBC • Jun. 6, 2026

In Navarrette’s hands, this push-pull between good and spiritual evil is gripping.

From Salon • Jun. 4, 2026

It means standing up to evil regimes and standing with the friends of freedom on the world stage.

From The Wall Street Journal • May 31, 2026

The evil was not merely that searches occurred but that the government treated entire populations as searchable first and innocent later.

From Slate • May 20, 2026

He slid out of his desk, giving the evil eye to Daniel, who said “What?” while putting more wet flour on his tongue.

From "Chronicles of a Lizard Nobody" by Patrick Ness




Vocabulary lists containing evil


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