different between alnight vs almight
alnight
English
Etymology
From all +? night.
Noun
alnight (plural alnights)
- (obsolete) A great cake of wax with a wick in the midst, intended to burn all night.
References
- alnight in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
Anagrams
- Althing, halting, lathing, thingal
alnight From the web:
- what a night
- what a night lyrics
- what a nightmare
- what a night for a knight
- what a night another round
- what a nightmare charlie brown
- what a night dj nate
- what a night meaning
almight
English
Etymology
From Middle English almight, almyght, almy?t, almiht, from Old English ælmiht, eallmiht (“almighty”) from eall (“all”) + miht (“might”).
Adjective
almight (comparative more almight, superlative most almight)
- (obsolete) almighty
References
- almight in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
almight From the web:
- what almighty means
- what might have been
- what might cause a shotgun to explode
- what might cause mechanical weathering
- what might be a phishing message
- what might be the best decision for country a
- what might be a microeconomic response to inflation
- what mighty god we serve
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