No, "hypocrite" and "hysterical" are not similar in meaning. "Hypocrite" refers to someone who pretends to have virtues, beliefs, or qualities that they do not possess, while "hysterical" refers to a state of uncontrolled emotion or behavior. The two terms are not contradictory but rather represent different aspects of behavior.
No. Hypocrite, from the Greek verb hypokrino, means someone who affects rectitude while behaving basely; originally the word hypocrisy meant "answering, or playing a part as an actor."Hysterical derives from hystera, the Greek word for "womb."
Oh, dude, they're like totally different! "Hypocrite" is when someone says one thing but does another, while "hysterical" is like when you're laughing so hard you can't breathe. It's like comparing apples to oranges, man.
Do you mean 'hypocrite'? "Jane is a hypocrite" "You are a hypocrite because you told me not to do that and now you are doing it" "You are such a hyprocrite - you are always telling me not to do that!"
It means that the worst kind of hypocrite is the one who doesn't believe he or she is a hypocrite.
It means "womb" or "uterus"
A hypocrite.
I cannot see what was so hysterical about the joke.He broke out into a hysterical laugher.
crite means stern or harsh as in critic
Hysteria, which is the same word that people in Athens use.
The cast of The Hypocrite - 2010 includes: Nick Perret as The Hypocrite
Hysterical means suffering from hysteria