different between aum vs paum
aum
Translingual
Alternative forms
- om
Etymology
From Sanskrit ? (o?).
Noun
aum
- A common transliteration of ?, the sacred syllable in Hinduism.
English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “Said to be from Dutch aam”)
Noun
aum (plural aums)
- (Britain, archaic) A unit of hock equal to approximately 30 gallons.
Anagrams
- AMU, MAU, MUA, Mau, UMA, Uma, amu
Westrobothnian
Etymology 1
From Old Norse aumr.
Adjective
aum
- Sore, delicate, suffering from pain.
Etymology 2
From Old Norse eyma. For the lack of umlaut compare dr?um, as well as auk, rauk.
Verb
aum
- (intransitive) To hold tenderness, have affection.
- (intransitive) To feel tender, aching in some limb.
Related terms
- öntj
- öntjes
- öntjes?mm
- öntjele
References
aum From the web:
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paum
English
Etymology
See palm (“to cheat”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p??m/, /p??m/
Verb
paum (third-person singular simple present paums, present participle pauming, simple past and past participle paumed)
- (obsolete) To palm off by fraud.
- (obsolete) To cheat at cards.
Anagrams
- Puma, puma, upma
paum From the web:
- what paume mean
- what does paume mean answer
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- what does pacu mean
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- what does paume mean in english
- what does pompous mean
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