different between blake vs clake

blake

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English blak, blac (pale), from Old English bl?c (pale, pallid, wan, livid; bright, shining, glittering, flashing) and Old Norse bleikr (pale; yellow, pink; any non-red warm color); both from Proto-Germanic *blaikaz (pale; shining). Compare Scots bleg (light, drab). More at bleak.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -e?k

Adjective

blake (comparative blaker or more blake, superlative blakest or most blake)

  1. (Britain dialectal, Northern England, poetic) Pale; wan; sallow; yellow.
Synonyms
  • (sickly pale): see also Thesaurus:pallid

Etymology 2

From the Middle English bl?ken, the northern reproduction (the form in the south was bl?ken, whence the verb bloke) of the Old English bl?cian (to become pale), from bl?c (shining, white, pale).

Verb

blake (third-person singular simple present blakes, present participle blaking, simple past and past participle blaked)

  1. (obsolete, intransitive) To become pale.

Anagrams

  • Balke, Kaleb, bleak

Dutch

Pronunciation

Verb

blake

  1. (archaic) singular present subjunctive of blaken

Anagrams

  • balke, kabel

German

Pronunciation

Verb

blake

  1. inflection of blaken:
    1. first-person singular present
    2. first/third-person singular subjunctive I
    3. singular imperative

Middle English

Adjective

blake

  1. Alternative form of blak

blake From the web:

  • what blake shelton told ellen
  • what blake means
  • what blake lively character are you
  • what blakely factors
  • what blake does


clake

English

Noun

clake (plural clakes)

  1. Alternative form of claik (the barnacle goose)

Anagrams

  • Aleck, lacke

clake From the web:

  • are clacker balls illegal
  • where to buy clacker balls
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