different between aggest vs ageest
aggest
English
Etymology
From Latin aggestus, past participle of aggerere. See agger.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??d??st/
Verb
aggest (third-person singular simple present aggests, present participle aggesting, simple past and past participle aggested)
- (obsolete) To heap up.
- The violence of the waters aggested the earth.
aggest From the web:
ageest
English
Etymology
Used at the turn of the 19th century.
Adjective
ageest (comparative more ageest, superlative most ageest)
- (obsolete, West Country, Devon) afraid, astonished
References
- G. A. Cooke, The County of Devon
Anagrams
- e-gates, egesta
ageest From the web:
- what age eat popcorn
- what age eat sushi
- what age eat cheerios
- what age eat honey
- what age eats the most
- what age eat raisins
- what age eat grapes
- what age eat peanuts
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- aggest vs ageest
- ageest vs agenst
- ageest vs agreest
- astonished vs ageest
- afraid vs ageest
- geish vs geist
- heist vs geist
- geist vs guist
- deist vs geist
- geist vs geis
- grist vs geist
- geist vs gist
- agenst vs agent
- agenst vs ageinst
- agents vs agenst
- agenst vs agenest
- agenst vs ageynst
- opposite vs ageinst
- ageinest vs ageinst
- ageynst vs ageinst