different between feaze vs feare
feaze
English
Etymology
From Middle English fesen (“to drive, incite, put into action; frighten, terrify, prosecute, punish”), from Old English f?san, f?san (“to hasten, impel”), from Proto-Germanic *funsijan? (“to make ready”).
Verb
feaze (third-person singular simple present feazes, present participle feazing, simple past and past participle feazed)
- Alternative form of fease
- Alternative form of faze
- There's mighty little that feazes you.
References
Anagrams
- ezafe, ez?fe
feaze From the web:
- what faze mean
- what does feaze
- what dies faze mean
- what do faze mean
- what us a feaze
- what does a faze mean
- what does faze stand for
- what do faze stand for
feare
English
Noun
feare (plural feares)
- Obsolete spelling of fear
Verb
feare (third-person singular simple present feares, present participle fearing, simple past and past participle feared)
- Obsolete spelling of fear
Anagrams
- EAfrE
West Frisian
Adjective
feare
- inflection of fear:
- indefinite common singular
- indefinite plural
- definite
feare From the web:
- what feared beasts are admired in lamentations
- what feared means
- what fearest means
- what feared the constitution
- feared what is meaning in hindi
- feared what does mean
- what i feared came upon me
- what is feared by some welcomed by a few
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- feaze vs feare
- teaze vs feaze
- unravel vs feaze
- untwist vs feaze
- feaze vs faze
- teaze vs teazle
- teaze vs tease
- teaze vs teade
- teaze vs teazed
- guide vs leade
- leade vs teade
- leaden vs leade
- leade vs lade
- leads vs leade
- leade vs deade
- leaue vs leade
- lease vs leaue
- leave vs leaue
- league vs leaue
- ameses vs amesed