different between cleve vs cleeve
cleve
English
Etymology
From Middle English cleve, from Old English cl?ofa, cl?afa (“that which is cloven, a cleft, chasm, cave, den, lair, cell, chamber, cellar, apartment”), from Proto-Germanic *klebô (“chamber, cell”), from Proto-Indo-European *glewb?- (“to cut, cleave, split, divide”). Cognate with Old Norse klefi (“a closet, sleeping closet, bedroom”) (whence Icelandic klefi (“cell, compartment”)). Related to cleave.
Noun
cleve (plural cleves)
- (now chiefly dialectal) A room; chamber.
- (now chiefly dialectal) A cottage.
- (obsolete) A cliff or hillside.
Middle English
Etymology 1
Inherited from Old English cl?ofa, from Proto-Germanic *klebô.
Alternative forms
- kleve
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?kle?v(?)/, /?kl??v(?)/
Noun
cleve (plural cleves)
- (rare) An abode or home; where someone resides.
- (rare) A granary.
Descendants
- English: cleve
References
- “cl?ve, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-07-31.
Etymology 2
Verb
cleve
- Alternative form of cleven (“to split”)
Etymology 3
Verb
cleve
- Alternative form of cleven (“to stick”)
cleve From the web:
cleeve
English
Etymology
From Irish cliabh (“basket”).
Noun
cleeve (plural cleeves)
- A large wickerwork basket for carrying produce or turf.
Middle English
Verb
cleeve
- Alternative form of cleven (“to split”)
cleeve From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- cleve vs cleeve
- clove vs cleve
- bleve vs cleve
- clave vs cleve
- steadiest vs steamiest
- steamiest vs seamiest
- antipyretic vs phenacetin
- analgesic vs phenacetin
- exaggerative vs exaggeratory
- exaggerative vs exaggerativeness
- exaggerative vs exaggeratively
- exaggeration vs exaggerative
- exaggerative vs exaggerate
- globe vs globy
- terms vs anticous
- embroil vs embroils
- hypertension vs chlorothiazide
- diuretic vs chlorothiazide
- hydrochorothiazide vs chlorothiazide
- hydrochthiazide vs chlorothiazide