Little Book of Confusables

EMACIATED vs EMANCIPATED vs EMASCULATED: simple tips to remember the difference

The words EMACIATED, EMANCIPATED and EMASCULATED are easy to confuse because they look and sound similar – yet their meanings are very different! Read on for how to remember the difference between these confusing words.

Here are some simple tips to remember the difference between EMACIATED, EMANCIPATED, and EMASCULATED.

When to use EMACIATED

EMACIATED is an adjective that means thin and frail because of a lack of nutrition.

You can use EMACIATED in a sentence like this:

“The remaining survivors were EMACIATED.”

OR

“The stray cat was EMACIATED when we rescued it.”

When to use EMANCIPATED

EMANCIPATED is an adjective that means being free.

You can use EMANCIPATED in a sentence like this:

“She EMANCIPATED herself from her parents’ care aged 15.”

OR

“The slaves were EMANCIPATED at the end of the 19th century.”

When to use EMASCULATED

EMASCULATED is an adjective meaning made weaker or less effective, or deprived of masculinity.

You can use EMASCULATED in a sentence like this:

“The committed was EMASCULATED by local politics.”

OR 

“While he’d never admit it, he felt EMASCULATED by her success.”

Pro Tip

To remember the difference between these confusing words, think of the similarity between EMASCULATE and MASCULine – and the fact that a freed MAN is EMANCIPATED.

I hope these tips help you remember the difference between EMACIATED, EMANCIPATED and EMASCULATED in future!


Get more tips in The Little Book of Confusables

Fun, memorable spelling tips for 600 confusing words, packed into 300+ gorgeous pages: just £11.95.

You’ll wonder how you managed without it!

GOLD award winner: 2023 eLit book awards/Distinguished Favorite: 2023 NYC Big Book Awards.

EMACIATED vs EMANCIPATED vs EMASCULATED: simple tips to remember the difference

The Little Book of Confusables by Sarah Townsend

No more confusing words!

Master 600 confusing words with The Little Book of Confusables: 300 gorgeous pages packed with memorable, fun spelling tips – from ACCEPT + EXCEPT to YOUNG + YOUTHFUL.

Loved by writers everywhere, this multi-award-winning guide has been described as The perfect book for anyone who ever has to write anything!”.

BUY NOW

Your fun guide to confusing words
The Little Book of Confusables
Buy Now