different between bev vs josh
bev
English
Noun
bev (plural bevs)
- Abbreviation of beverage.
- 2005, Anneke Jessen, Christopher Vignoles, Jamaica: Trade, Integration and the Quest for Growth (page 11)
- Spirits & dist. alcoholic bevs
- 2005, Anneke Jessen, Christopher Vignoles, Jamaica: Trade, Integration and the Quest for Growth (page 11)
Anagrams
- EBV
Breton
Adjective
bev
- live, having life
Related terms
- beva
Lombard
Etymology
Akin to bere, older *bevere. See Latin bibere.
Verb
bev
- to drink
bev From the web:
- what beverages contain gluten
- what beverages have electrolytes
- what beverage has the most caffeine
- what beverages count as water intake
- what beverages can diabetics drink
- what beverages are diuretics
- what beverages does pepsi own
- what beverage has the most electrolytes
josh
English
Etymology
Of disputed origin, but first attested in the mid-19th century as a verb. The earliest example is capitalized, so it is likely a nickname of the proper name Joshua (see more there). Perhaps it was taken as a typical name of an old farmer.
Noun
josh (plural joshes)
- An instance of good-natured banter.
Verb
josh (third-person singular simple present joshes, present participle joshing, simple past and past participle joshed)
- (transitive) To tease someone in a kindly or friendly fashion.
- (intransitive) To make or exchange good-natured jokes.
- 1902: We are old friends, did I not tell you? So I may, what you Americans call, josh with him. — Jack London, A Daughter of the Snows
- 2013, Russell Brand, Russell Brand and the GQ awards: 'It's amazing how absurd it seems' (in The Guardian, 13 September 2013)[1]
- Boris, it seems, is taking it in this spirit, joshing beneath his ever-redeeming barnet that Labour's opposition to military action in Syria is a fey stance that he, as GQ politician of the year, would never be guilty of.
Translations
Derived terms
- josher
- joshingly
References
- “josh” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
Albanian
Etymology
From Proto-Albanian *j?udsja, from Proto-Indo-European *Hyewd?- (compare Lithuanian jáudinti (“to excite, arouse”), Polish judzi? (“to incite”), Latin jubere (“to order”)).
Verb
josh (first-person singular past tense josha, participle joshur)
- to fondle, caress
- to entice, seduce
Derived terms
- joshë
josh From the web:
- what joshua means
- what josh won the fight
- what josh won
- what josh wrote tumblr
- what josh won the joshua fight
- what josh memes
- what joshua did in the bible
- what joshua means in the bible
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