different between beamy vs belamy
beamy
English
Etymology
From Middle English beami, bemi, equivalent to beam +? -y.
Adjective
beamy (comparative beamier, superlative beamiest)
- Resembling a beam in size and weight; massy.
- a beamy spear
- (archaic) Having horns or antlers.
- beamy stags
- (nautical) Having much beam or breadth; wide.
- Showing or emitting rays of light; beaming; radiant; shining.
- (figuratively) Radiant; beamsome; joyous; gladsome.
Anagrams
- Mabey, abyme, embay, maybe
beamy From the web:
- what does beamed mean
- what does beamy stand for
- what rhymes with beam
- what is the meaning of beamed
- what does it mean to get beamed
- what does the word beamed mean
belamy
Middle English
Alternative forms
- bellami, beal ami, bele ami
Etymology
From Middle French bel (“fair”) +? amy (“friend”).
Noun
belamy (plural belamies)
- A good or dear friend.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Chaucer to this entry?)
References
- “b??l-am?, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
belamy From the web:
- what is belamyl used for
- what is belamyl injection
- what does bellamy mean
- what episode does bellamy die
- what happened to bellamy
- what happened to bellamy on the 100
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- beamy vs belamy
- belamy vs belay
- belamy vs belams
- belah vs belam
- krab vs krai
- korai vs krai
- krai vs rai
- kai vs krai
- kra vs krai
- krai vs krar
- krai vs kran
- krai vs krait
- krai vs stavropol
- enthusiasm vs verbindingsstreepje
- humans vs verbindingsstreepje
- acquire vs verbindingsstreepje
- forum vs verbindingsstreepje
- verbindingsstreepje vs tagalog
- res vs verbindingsstreepje
- irritate vs verbindingsstreepje