different between faker vs farer
faker
English
Etymology
fake +? -er
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?fe?k?/
- Rhymes: -e?k?(r)
Noun
faker (plural fakers)
- One who fakes something.
- An impostor or impersonator.
- (obsolete) A thief.
- (obsolete) A peddler of petty things.
- (obsolete) A workman who dresses things up.
Translations
See also
- fakir
Anagrams
- Kafer, freak
faker From the web:
- what faker mean
- what's fakers na account
- what faker meaning in spanish
- fakery meaning
- faker what was that mp3
- faker what was that sound effect
- faker what was that zed
- faker what was that sound
farer
English
Etymology
From Middle English farere (attested in Middle English weyfarere, weifarere (“wayfarer”)), equivalent to fare (“to journey, travel”) +? -er. Compare Old English fara (“traveller, farer”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?f????(?)/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?f????/
- Rhymes: -??r?(r)
- Homophone: fairer
Noun
farer (plural farers)
- (archaic) One who fares or travels, a traveller, tripper
Derived terms
Anagrams
- Ferra, Frear, farre
Danish
Noun
farer c
- indefinite plural of fare
Verb
farer
- present of fare
Latin
Verb
f?rer
- first-person singular imperfect active subjunctive of for
Norwegian Bokmål
Noun
farer m
- indefinite plural of fare
Verb
farer
- present of fare
farer From the web:
- farer meaning
- part of speech of farmer
- what does fairer mean
- what does ferrari mean
- what does farer
- what dies fuhrer mean
- what does a farmer do
- what does fuhrer mean in english
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- faker vs farer
- farer vs darer
- fades vs jades
- fades vs fados
- faes vs fades
- fades vs gades
- faves vs fades
- hades vs fades
- faeder vs feeder
- expostulation vs expostulatingly
- expostulation vs expostulatory
- kick vs expostulation
- squawk vs expostulation
- remonstration vs expostulation
- remonstrance vs expostulation
- protestation vs expostulation
- protest vs expostulation
- objection vs expostulation
- exception vs expostulation
- terms vs expostulatory