different between frover vs frower
frover
English
Etymology
From Middle English frovre, frofre (“comfort”), from Old English fr?for (“consolation, joy, refuge, compensation, help, benefit”), from Proto-West Germanic *fr?bru (“solace”), from Proto-Indo-European *trep-, *terp- (“to have good food, prosper, satiate, enjoy”). Cognate with Old Saxon fr?vra, fr?fra (“consolation, comfort, help”), Old High German fluobara (“consolation, comfort, help, assistance”).
Verb
frover (third-person singular simple present frovers, present participle frovering, simple past and past participle frovered)
- (dialectal) To comfort; solace.
Related terms
- frevere
- frother
Anagrams
- fervor
frover From the web:
frower
English
Etymology
Compare frow and British dialect frommard.
Noun
frower (plural frowers)
- A froe or frow (cleaving tool).
frower From the web:
- what flower am i
- what flowers are poisonous to cats
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- what flowers are edible
- what flowers are safe for cats
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