different between janglery vs jangler
janglery
English
Etymology
Compare Old French janglerie (“chattering, talk”). Likely of onomatopoeiac origin.
Noun
janglery (uncountable)
- (obsolete) chatter, gossip
janglery From the web:
jangler
English
Etymology
jangle +? -er
Noun
jangler (plural janglers)
- Someone who, or something that jangles.
- A chatterer.
- Someone who argues noisily.
Old French
Etymology
From Frankish *jangal?n, of Germanic origin and probably imitative (compare similar development in Latin gannio (“I bark, yelp”)). The form jogler (whence modern French jongler), derived from Latin iocor, ioculor (“to jest, to make fun”).
Verb
jangler
- to entertain
- (by extension) to tell stories and fables
Conjugation
This verb conjugates as a first-group verb ending in -er. In the present tense an extra supporting e is needed in the first-person singular indicative and throughout the singular subjunctive, and the third-person singular subjunctive ending -t is lost. Old French conjugation varies significantly by date and by region. The following conjugation should be treated as a guide.
Descendants
- ? English: juggle
- French: jongler
- ? Occitan: joglar
- ? Spanish: jinglar
jangler From the web:
- what does juggler mean
- what is the meaning of juggler
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