different between eats vs easts

eats

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /i?ts/
  • Rhymes: -i?ts

Verb

eats

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of eat

Noun

eats pl (plural only)

  1. (slang) Food.
    When are we going to get some eats?
    • 1978, John Linssen, Tabitha fffoulkes, Arbor House, page 109,
      The shower made me feel better, but I was still hungry.
      "I'm going to grab some eats."
      "Dinner will be waiting for you at home."
      "I'M GOING TO GRAB SOME EATS."
    • 2011, Chathuri Nugawela, Eastern Waves, Western Shores, Xlibris, page 81,
      At most of these parties, no one knew who the host was, and you just heard from a friend that there was one, you got some eats and off you went.
    • 2017, Derek T. Morgan, More Cats Tails, Strategic Book Publishing and Rights Co., page 579,
      Buggs sighed. He would have preferred to go get some eats too, but Ermin was right.

Anagrams

  • AEST, ESTA, East, SEAT, Seat, TEAs, east, etas, sate, saté, seat, seta, tase, teas

eats From the web:

  • what eats lions
  • what eats snakes
  • what eats jellyfish
  • what eats squirrels
  • what eats spiders
  • what eats coyotes
  • what eats frogs
  • what eats rabbits


easts

English

Noun

easts

  1. plural of east

Anagrams

  • ASSET, SEATs, SESTA, Seats, TASes, TESSA, Tessa, asset, sates, satés, seats, setas, tases, tasse

easts From the web:

  • what eats snakes
  • what eats foxes
  • what eats grass
  • what eats grasshoppers
  • what eats frogs
  • what eats lions
  • what eats rabbits
  • what eats birds
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