different between gray vs canities

gray

English

Alternative forms

  • grey (used in the UK and the Commonwealth and also in the US)

Etymology 1

From grey.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: gr?, IPA(key): /??e?/
  • Rhymes: -e?
  • Homophones: grey, greige

Adjective

gray (comparative grayer or more gray, superlative grayest or most gray)

  1. Having a color somewhere between white and black, as the ash of an ember.
  2. Dreary, gloomy.
    • 1980, Daniel C. Gerould, Stanis?aw I. Witkiewicz, The Beelzebub Sonata: Plays, Essays, Documents
      the era of gray, boring banality and stagnation
  3. Having an indistinct, disputed or uncertain quality.
  4. Relating to older people.
    • February 8, 1800, Fisher Ames, Eulogy on Washington
      gray experience
    • 2004, Betty Berzon, Permanent Partners: Building Gay & Lesbian Relationships That Last (page 20)
      In a subculture that idealizes youth, being gay and gray does not exactly make one a hot ticket. Older gays and lesbians often relegate themselves to separate and unequal meeting places.
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

gray (third-person singular simple present grays, present participle graying, simple past and past participle grayed)

  1. To become gray.
  2. To cause to become gray.
  3. (demography, slang) To turn progressively older, alluding to graying of hair through aging (used in context of the population of a geographic region)
  4. (transitive, photography) To give a soft effect to (a photograph) by covering the negative while printing with a ground-glass plate.
Translations

Noun

gray (plural grays)

  1. An achromatic colour intermediate between black and white.
  2. An animal or thing of grey colour, such as a horse, badger, or salmon.
  3. (chiefly US, ufology) an extraterrestrial humanoid with grayish skin, bulbous black eyes, and an enlarged head.
  4. (US, two-up) A penny with a tail on both sides, used for cheating.
Translations

See also

References

Etymology 2

Named after English physicist Louis Harold Gray (1905–1965).

Noun

gray (plural grays)

  1. In the International System of Units, the derived unit of absorbed dose of radiation (radiation absorbed by a patient); one joule of energy absorbed per kilogram of the patient's mass. Symbol: Gy
    Coordinate term: rad
Derived terms
  • kilogray
Translations
Further reading
  • gray (unit) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Gary, Yarg, gyra

Czech

Noun

gray m

  1. gray (unit of absorbed radiation)

Further reading

  • gray in Akademický slovník cizích slov, 1995, at prirucka.ujc.cas.cz

Finnish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??rei?/, [??re?i?]

Noun

gray

  1. gray (SI unit)

Declension


French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???j/

Noun

gray m (plural grays)

  1. gray (SI unit)

Portuguese

Etymology 1

Noun

gray m (plural grays)

  1. (physics) gray (SI unit of absorbed radiation)

Etymology 2

Alternative forms

  • grey

Noun

gray m (plural grays)

  1. (ufology) gray (one of a race of evil, short extraterrestrial beings)

Swedish

Noun

gray c

  1. gray (SI unit)

gray From the web:

  • what gray goes with alabaster
  • what gray goes with navajo white
  • what gray paint goes with brown
  • what gray wolves eat
  • what gray goes with hale navy
  • what gray hair means
  • what gray goes with agreeable gray
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canities

English

Etymology

From Latin c?niti?s (gray hair, old age).

Noun

canities (uncountable)

  1. (uncommon, medicine) The condition of having gray hair.

Anagrams

  • Cainites, seitanic

Latin

Alternative forms

  • c?nitia

Etymology

c?nus (hoary, gray) +? -iti?s

Noun

c?niti?s f (genitive c?niti??); fifth declension

  1. hoar; hoariness ; a grayish-white color
  2. grey hair
  3. old age

Declension

Fifth-declension noun.

  • As with most fifth-declension nouns, only singular forms are attested in Classical Latin.

References

  • canities in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • canities in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • canities in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français, Hachette

Anagrams

  • scientia

canities From the web:

  • canities meaning
  • what does vanities mean
  • what causes canities
  • what does canities
  • what us cities
  • what is premature canities
  • what does canities mean
  • canities definition
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