What's the difference between eternity and unoriginated?

Eternity


Definition:

  • (n.) Infinite duration, without beginning in the past or end in the future; also, duration without end in the future; endless time.
  • (n.) Condition which begins at death; immortality.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Will the United fans' eternal favourite soon add his voice to that of 140,000 fans?
  • (2) The lucky thing is, says Susan Calman , that although she is "an eternal worrier, occasionally I do something stupid."
  • (3) In legend, Gilgamesh fell asleep on the water side and let slip from his fingers the plant of eternal youth.
  • (4) To butcher TS Eliot: I have seen the mercury of my thermometer flicker, And I have seen the eternal footman hold my sheets drenched in sweat at 3am, and snicker, And in short, I was too hot.
  • (5) Dayton Flyers once again pull off the round's first upset The final minute of game time seemed to take a small eternity in real time, with the in-game action interrupted by four team timeouts and eight free throw attempts.
  • (6) Greed is not only good, it is a fundamental prop to the fantasy of eternal growth.
  • (7) In each of his creative capacities, he was the eternal quiet man.
  • (8) Even Alec – eternally hard to please where his own work was concerned – loved it.
  • (9) 9.06am BST There are some eternal verities in politics and one of them is that British governments (especially Conservative-led ones) are always fighting a war on red tape.
  • (10) Boris Johnson accused of 'dishonest gymnastics' over TTIP U-turn Read more “But fundamentally, what is lacking is the eternal problem, which is that there is no underlying loyalty to the idea of Europe .
  • (11) They call it, rather unsurprisingly, the eternal flame.
  • (12) They were created on the basis that, whatever the cost, there are some eternal values that are worth upholding in a civilised society.
  • (13) He has taken the legacy of postwar abstract expressionism, and allied to that a deep love of the great eternal themes of the classical world.
  • (14) Murray said: "I'm eternally grateful to Ivan for all his hard work over the past two years, the most successful of my career so far.
  • (15) I am not sure that a lucrative career in rape gags is more helpful than a failed one, but the rape hum seems eternal.
  • (16) Ras proteins are membrane-associated transducers of eternal stimuli to unknown intracellular targets.
  • (17) One, Baroness O'Cathain, has said, in relation to politics and her evangelism: "For me it is a guarantee of eternal peace."
  • (18) Committed to eliminating the budget deficit by the end of next year, it just does not have the cash to fund, for example, big new infrastructure projects like an eternally proposed (and eternally postponed) bridge over the Straits of Messina.
  • (19) François Bayrou must have resigned himself to being the eternal also-ran of French presidential elections, by now.
  • (20) To all those who offered me their friendship, support and prayers, I will be eternally grateful.

Unoriginated


Definition:

  • (a.) Not originated; existing from all eternity.
  • (a.) Not yet caused to be, or to be made; as, possible inventions still unoriginated.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) But in terms of policy his team’s thinking was either unoriginal recasting of the Labour manifesto or too micro to have much impact.
  • (2) And in Italy, the FTSE MIB has fallen by 540 points to 15391, down 3.3% Investors have raced for the safety of the US dollar ( so unoriginal ), pushing the euro down to $1.284.
  • (3) Fulham's following was tiny and quiet at the start and smaller and even quieter when they were losing 6-0 … TV montage music for the season's highlights Unoriginal I know, but in the circumstances: Que Sera Sera – Doris Day.
  • (4) It is a genre dominated by the thoroughly unoriginal notion that you cannot trust the government.
  • (5) The call to join the establishment once you have made it – in most cases, using all the socialist advantages of the postwar consensus, such as free health, free education and social housing – is sadly unoriginal.
  • (6) But when I ask if the trust means that BBC drama is unambitious or unoriginal, he is quick to counter.
  • (7) Freeman Dyson, the physicist, captured the full range of academic sentiment in this dry appraisal: "This experiment is clumsy, tedious, unoriginal.
  • (8) This is an unoriginal way of visualising the old antisemitic charge that Jews are all-powerful.
  • (9) With the knowledge of that history, it would have been a shock to JFK to hear another inaugural address declaring, “America First.” The dark pessimism and conspiracism of Trump’s speech are unoriginal with him.
  • (10) The copycat unoriginality of building London's Eiffel verges on parody when one realises that the Orbit will be 100m shorter than the Parisian monument and 20m shorter than the diminutive Blackpool Tower.
  • (11) Kind commentators called his work derivative and unoriginal.
  • (12) Whatever you think of his music – and there are oft-repeated accusations of creative unoriginality, the sense that his songs are little more than hyped-up elevator musack – it has enjoyed remarkable longevity.

Words possibly related to "unoriginated"