different between afare vs aftre
afare
English
Etymology
From Middle English afaren, from Old English ?faran (“to depart, march, to go out of or from a place, travel, remove, lead out”). Equivalent to a- +? fare.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??f??(?)/
- Homophone: affair
Verb
afare (third-person singular simple present afares, present participle afaring, simple past afared or afore, past participle afared or afaren)
- (intransitive, obsolete) To depart.
Anagrams
- afear
French
Adjective
afare
- feminine singular of afar
afare From the web:
- what is a fare means
- what makes afarensis a hominin
- what does afarensis mean
- what makes afarensis a hominin quizlet
- what does affair mean
- what does fare mean
- what did afarensis do
- what did afarensis look like
aftre
English
Preposition
aftre
- Obsolete spelling of after
Anagrams
- after, after-, frate, freat, freta, rafte, trafe
aftre From the web:
- what after trillion
- what after gen z
- what after may
- what after april
- what after freshman
- what after dragon ball super
- what after quadruple
- what after millennials
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- afare vs aftre
- afar vs afare
- afare vs aware
- depart vs afare
- afare vs fare
- uneducated vs learningless
- learning vs learningless
- blameable vs blamable
- roadrunners vs cranes
- cranes vs derricks
- cranes vs craned
- crangs vs cranes
- crares vs cranes
- crares vs crazes
- crares vs crores
- crasis vs crass
- crisis vs crasis
- crasis vs coronis
- crasis vs synizesis
- diphthong vs crasis