different between gallon vs gallow

gallon

English

Etymology

From Middle English gallon, galoun, galun, from Old Northern French galun, galon (liquid measure) (compare Old French jalon), from Late Latin galum, galus (measure of wine), from Vulgar Latin *galla (vessel), possibly from Gaulish, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kel- (goblet). Cognate with Ancient Greek ????? (kúlix, cup), Sanskrit ??? (kala?a, jar, pitcher; measure of liquid). Related to Old French gille (wine measure) (from Medieval Latin gillo (earthenware jar)), Old French jale (bowl), Old French jaloie (measure of capacity).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??æl?n/
  • Rhymes: -æl?n
  • Hyphenation: gal?lon

Noun

gallon (plural gallons)

  1. A unit of volume, equivalent to eight pints
  2. (Britain, Canada) exactly 4.54609 liters; an imperial gallon
  3. (US) 231 cubic inches or approximately 3.785 liters for liquids (a "U.S. liquid gallon")
  4. (US) one-eighth of a U.S. bushel or approximately 4.405 liters for dry goods (a "U.S. dry gallon").
  5. (in the plural, informal) A large quantity (of any liquid).
    The pipe burst and gallons of water flooded into the kitchen.

Translations

Descendants

  • ? Cebuano: galon
  • ? Czech: galon
  • ? Serbo-Croatian: galon
  • ? Turkish: galon

Further reading

  • gallon on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Loglan

French

Noun

gallon m (plural gallons)

  1. gallon

Norman

Etymology

From Old Northern French galon, from Late Latin galum, galus (measure of wine), from Vulgar Latin *galla (vessel), possibly from Gaulish [Term?], ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kel- (goblet).

Noun

gallon m (plural gallons)

  1. (Jersey) gallon

Tatar

Noun

gallon

  1. gallon (a unit of volume)

References

[1]

Declension

gallon From the web:

  • = 3.78541178 liters
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gallow

English

Alternative forms

  • gally

Etymology

From Middle English *galowen (attested in begalewen (to begallow)), from Old English *gælwian (attested in ?gælwed (astonished; disconcerted)).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??æl??/
  • Rhymes: -æl??

Verb

gallow (third-person singular simple present gallows, present participle gallowing, simple past and past participle gallowed)

  1. (obsolete) To frighten or terrify.
    • c. 1604-05, William Shakespeare, King Lear, Act III Scene ii:
      The wrathful skies / Gallow the very wanderers of the dark / And make them keep their caves.

See also

  • gallows

Anagrams

  • gwolla

gallow From the web:

  • gallows meaning
  • what's gallows
  • what's gallows humour
  • what gallows humor mean
  • what's gallows pole
  • what gallows humor is
  • what gallowwalkers means
  • what does gallows mean in spanish
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