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enmity
[ en-mi-tee ]
noun
- a feeling or condition of hostility; hatred; ill will; animosity; antagonism.
- (in a video game) the targeting for attack of a player character by an enemy, and the circumstance-specific strength of that targeting for any particular character; hate; aggro: Use the character’s ranged attack to get enmity.
Your tank needs to be spamming “Provoke” at that mob to increase his enmity, or else it’s going to turn and target your mages.
Use the character’s ranged attack to get enmity.
enmity
/ ˈɛnmɪtɪ /
noun
- a feeling of hostility or ill will, as between enemies; antagonism
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of enmity1
Example Sentences
Without a common enemy, the Naqshabandi and ISIS might resume their natural enmity.
And they bristle too at the notion that they had some kind of personal enmity toward the president.
Believe what your post-hard-work-day brain will allow, but the enmity went from entrenched to fleeting in a blink of an eye.
We were involved in a terribly acrimonious breakup, with great enmity between us and a custody battle slowly gathering energy.
Yet the government in which Lapid serves appears tied to a notion of eternal enmity.
Rather blow out your own brains than treat with enmity those who are your liberators.
It is the crystallizer of character, the acid test of friendship, the final seal set upon enmity.
In short, they are human parasites on the larger natives, who suffer from their extortions, yet fear to provoke their enmity.
But this same nature, when pinched and starved, becomes a perfect storehouse of enmity and ill-feeling.
Oh, horrible thought, yet too natural to the unhappy prisoner, everywhere in fear of enmity and fraud!
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