different between eef vs ees
eef
English
Etymology 1
Verb
eef (third-person singular simple present eefs, present participle eefing, simple past and past participle eefed)
- To make a vocal rhythm in which some sounds are made by inhaling.
- To inhale as part of such a rhythm.
Etymology 2
Conjunction
eef
- Nonstandard spelling of if representing old-fashioned AAVE or various accents, including Latin-American, French or Romani.
Anagrams
- EFE, fee
eef From the web:
- what if
- what if movie
- what if god was one of us
- what if netflix
- what if we kissed meme
- what if release date
- what if it's us
- what if cast
ees
English
Etymology 1
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /i?z/
- Homophone: ease
Noun
ees
- (rare) plural of e, the name of the letter E.
Etymology 2
Pronunciation spelling of is, representing Latino- or French-accented English.
Verb
ees
- (nonstandard) Alternative spelling of is
Etymology 3
Noun
ees
- plural of ee
Anagrams
- -ese, ESE, Ese, ese, see
Estonian
Etymology
From Proto-Finno-Ugric *ede. Cognates include Finnish esi- and Hungarian el?tt.
Postposition
ees
- before, in front of
Derived terms
- ees-
- ette
- eest
Finnish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?e?s/, [?e??s?]
- Rhymes: -e?s
- Syllabification: ees
Adverb
ees
- (dialectal) Alternative form of edes.
See also
- ees-
- taas
ees From the web:
- what does smh mean
- what does woke mean
- what does pansexual mean
- what does pog mean
- what does baka mean
- what does non binary mean
- what does simp mean
- what does 444 mean
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