different between eale vs weale
eale
English
Noun
eale (countable and uncountable, plural eales)
- Obsolete form of ale.
- 1599-1601, William Shakespeare, Hamlet (act 1 scene 4)
- Hamlet: As infinite as man may undergo--
Shall in the general censure take corruption
From that particular fault: the dram of eale
Doth all the noble substance of a doubt
To his own scandal.
- Hamlet: As infinite as man may undergo--
- 1599-1601, William Shakespeare, Hamlet (act 1 scene 4)
- Alternative form of yale (mythical beast)
Anagrams
- alee
Estonian
Noun
eale
- allative singular of iga
Latin
Alternative forms
- eocle
Etymology
Wanderwort.
Noun
eale ? (indeclinable)
- A mythical African beast, based perhaps on the rhinoceros; the yale.
- c. 77 CE – 79 CE, Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia 8.73:
- Apud e?sdem et quae voc?tur eale, magnit?dine equ? fluvi?t?lis, caud? elephant?, col?re nigr? vel fulv?, m?xill?s apr?, mai?ra cubit?libus cornua hab?ns mobilia quae alterna in pugn? s? sistunt vari?que ?nf?sta aut obl?qua, utcumque rati? m?nstr?vit.
- Among the same people there’s also the beast that is called yale, of the size of a hippopotamus, with the tail of an elephant, of black or yellow colour, with the jaws of a boar, having movable horns longer than a cubit which in fight are raised alternatively, either forwards or obliquely, as need be.
- Apud e?sdem et quae voc?tur eale, magnit?dine equ? fluvi?t?lis, caud? elephant?, col?re nigr? vel fulv?, m?xill?s apr?, mai?ra cubit?libus cornua hab?ns mobilia quae alterna in pugn? s? sistunt vari?que ?nf?sta aut obl?qua, utcumque rati? m?nstr?vit.
- c. 77 CE – 79 CE, Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia 8.73:
References
- eale in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “eale” in volume V 2, column 2, line 17 in the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae (TLL Open Access), Berlin (formerly Leipzig): De Gruyter (formerly Teubner), 1900–present
Northern Sami
Pronunciation
- (Kautokeino) IPA(key): /?e?ale/
Verb
eale
- inflection of eallit:
- present indicative connegative
- second-person singular imperative
- imperative connegative
Yola
Etymology
From Middle English ele, from Old English ?l, from Proto-West Germanic *?l.
Noun
eale (plural eales)
- eel
References
- Jacob Poole (1867) , William Barnes, editor, A glossary, with some pieces of verse, of the old dialect of the English colony in the baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, J. Russell Smith, ?ISBN
eale From the web:
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weale
English
Noun
weale (countable and uncountable, plural weales)
- Alternative form of wale
- Alternative form of weal
- Alternative form of weel
Anagrams
- aweel
weale From the web:
- what does weal mean
- what do weasels eat
- what does wesley mean
- what eats weasels
- what does wealed
- weared means
- what happened to wesley snipes
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