different between geason vs geazon
geason
English
Alternative forms
- geazon, gaison, gessen
Etymology
From Middle English geson, gesene (“rare, scarce”), from Old English g?sne (“deprived of, wanting, destitute, barren, sterile, dead”), from Proto-Germanic *gaisnijaz (“barren, poor”), from Proto-Indo-European *g??- (“to be gaping, yawn”). Cognate with North Frisian gast (“barren”), Low German güst (“barren”), Old High German geisini, keisini (“lack”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??i?z?n/, /??e?z?n/, /???z?n/
Adjective
geason (comparative more geason, superlative most geason)
- (rare or dialectal) Rare; uncommon; scarce.
- (Britain dialectal) Difficult to procure; scant; sparing.
- (rare or dialectal) Unusual; wonderful.
Synonyms
- (rare, uncommon, scarce): infrequent, raresome, selcouth; see also Thesaurus:rare
Anagrams
- Ganoes, Genaos, agones, genoas
geason From the web:
- what season is it
- what season does derek die
- what season are we in
- what season does george die
- what season is it in australia
- what season is fortnite on
- what season does lexie die
- what season is it right now
geazon
English
Adjective
geazon (comparative more geazon, superlative most geazon)
- Alternative form of geason
geazon From the web:
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