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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
mal·ice
/ˈmæləs/
惡意,蓄意,怨恨
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
mal·ice
n.
1.
Enmity
of
heart
;
malevolence
;
ill
will
;
a
spirit
delighting
in
harm
or
misfortune
to
another
;
a
disposition
to
injure
another
;
a
malignant
design
of
evil
.
“Nor
set
down
aught
in
malice
.”
Envy
,
hatred
,
and
malice
are
three
distinct
passions
of
the
mind
.
--
Ld
.
Holt
.
2.
Law
Any
wicked
or
mischievous
intention
of
the
mind
;
a
depraved
inclination
to
mischief
;
an
intention
to
vex
,
annoy
,
or
injure
another
person
,
or
to
do
a
wrongful
act
without
just
cause
or
cause
or
excuse
;
a
wanton
disregard
of
the
rights
or
safety
of
others
;
willfulness
.
Malice aforethought
or
Malice prepense
,
malice
previously
and
deliberately
entertained
.
Syn:
--
Spite
;
ill
will
;
malevolence
;
grudge
;
pique
;
bitterness
;
animosity
;
malignity
;
maliciousness
;
rancor
;
virulence
.
Usage:
See
Spite
. --
Malevolence
,
Malignity
,
Malignancy
.
Malice
is
a
stronger
word
than
malevolence
,
which
may
imply
only
a
desire
that
evil
may
befall
another
,
while
malice
desires
,
and
perhaps
intends
,
to
bring
it
about
.
Malignity
is
intense
and
deepseated
malice
.
It
implies
a
natural
delight
in
hating
and
wronging
others
.
One
who
is
malignant
must
be
both
malevolent
and
malicious
;
but
a
man
may
be
malicious
without
being
malignant
.
Proud
tyrants
who
maliciously
destroy
And
ride
o'er
ruins
with
malignant
joy
. --
Somerville
.
in
some
connections
,
malignity
seems
rather
more
pertinently
applied
to
a
radical
depravity
of
nature
,
and
malignancy
to
indications
of
this
depravity
,
in
temper
and
conduct
in
particular
instances
.
--
Cogan
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Mal·ice
,
v. t.
To
regard
with
extreme
ill
will
. [
Obs
.]
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
malice
n
1:
feeling
a
need
to
see
others
suffer
[
syn
:
maliciousness
,
spite
,
spitefulness
,
venom
]
2:
the
quality
of
threatening
evil
[
syn
:
malevolence
,
malevolency
]
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