different between ender vs edder
ender
English
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /??nd?(?)/
- (US) IPA(key): /??nd?/
- Rhymes: -?nd?(?)
Etymology 1
From Middle English ender; equivalent to end +? -er (agent suffix).
Noun
ender (plural enders)
- Something which ends another thing.
Translations
Etymology 2
From end +? -er (colloquializing suffix).
Noun
ender (plural enders)
- (kayaking) A maneuver in which one uses the pressure of a wave to flip one's kayak end over end.
Translations
References
- Nigel Foster, Nigel Foster's Surf Kayaking, Globe Pequot (1998), ?ISBN, page 74.
Anagrams
- Rende, derne, dreen, erned
Danish
Noun
ender c
- indefinite plural of ende
Verb
ender
- present of ende
Middle English
Alternative forms
- endar, eendere, endere
Etymology
From enden +? -er.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /???nd?r(?)/, /??nd?r(?)/
Noun
ender
- (rare) A person who fulfils God's plan or designs.
- (rare) A person who finishes or ends a thing.
Descendants
- English: ender
References
- “??nder, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-08-12.
Norwegian Bokmål
Pronunciation
Noun
ender m or f
- indefinite plural of and
ender m
- indefinite plural of ende
Verb
ender
- present tense of ende
Norwegian Nynorsk
Noun
ender f
- indefinite plural of and
Turkish
Adjective
ender (comparative daha ender, superlative en ender)
- rare
Synonyms
- nadir
ender From the web:
- what enderman say
- what ender dragon eat
- what endermen drop ender armor
- what ender chest do
- what enderman eat
- what ender 3 do i have
- what enderman say backwards
- what endermen do with blocks
edder
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English *edre, *eder, from Old English eder, edor (“hedge, fence”), from Proto-Germanic *edaraz, *eduraz (“hedge, border”). Cognate with Old High German etar.
Noun
edder (plural edders)
- Flexible wood worked into the top of hedge stakes, to bind them together.
Verb
edder (third-person singular simple present edders, present participle eddering, simple past and past participle eddered)
- (obsolete) To bind the top interweaving edder.
Etymology 2
Variant of adder.
Noun
edder (plural edders)
- An adder or snake.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Wright to this entry?)
Etymology 3
From Middle English edre (“a vein, blood vessel”), from Old English ?dre (“a vein, artery; sinew”), from Proto-West Germanic *?dr? (“vein”).
Cognates include (from Germanic) Old Saxon -?ðara (Dutch ader), Old High German ?dra (German Ader), Old Norse æðr (Swedish åder); (from Indo-European) Ancient Greek ???? (êtor, “heart”), Latin uterus, Old Irish inathar (“entrails”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??d.?/
Noun
edder (plural edders)
- (rare, dialect or obsolete) A blood vessel.
Anagrams
- dered, dreed
edder From the web:
- edderkoppen what language
- what does adder mean
- what is elderberry good for
- what do adder mean
- what does edderkopp mean
- what does edr stand for
- what did pat eddery die of
- what is love edderkoppen
you may also like
- ender vs edder
- elder vs edder
- eider vs edder
- terms vs sawder
- sander vs sawder
- laughe vs laughen
- laughed vs laughen
- laught vs laughe
- laughe vs laughs
- laughe vs laughed
- laughe vs laughy
- laughe vs laugh
- allistic vs neurodivergent
- autism vs neurodiversity
- configuration vs neurodiversity
- archetypically vs archetypally
- archetypic vs exemplary
- archetypic vs archetypal
- allistic vs ballistic
- allistic vs nonautistic