different between havior vs pavior

havior

English

Etymology

From Middle English havour, a corruption of Old French aveir, avoir (a having), of same origin as English aver (a workhorse). The h is due to confusion with have.

Noun

havior

  1. (obsolete) behaviour; demeanor

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pavior

English

Alternative forms

  • paviour

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman paviour, from pavier (to pave).

Noun

pavior (plural paviors)

  1. A person who lays paving slabs. [from 15th c.]
    • 1853, Charles Dickens, Household Words (volume 6, page 387)
      A "mooner," fond of staring into shop windows, or watching the labourers pulling up the pavement to inspect the gas-pipes, or listening stolidly to the dull "pech" of the paviour's rammer on the flags.
  2. A brick or slab used for paving. [from 17th c.]
  3. (obsolete) A machine that is used to tamp down paving slabs. [19th c.]

Latin

Verb

pavior

  1. first-person singular present passive indicative of pavi?

pavior From the web:

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