different between knoll vs knowe

knoll

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /n??l/, [n??l], [n??l]
  • (General American) enPR: n?l, IPA(key): /no?l/

Etymology 1

From Old English cnoll (summit), from Proto-Germanic *knudan-, *knudla-, *knulla- (lump), possibly related to cnotta.

Related to Old Norse knollr (found only in names of places), Dutch knol (tuber), Swedish knöl (tuber), Danish knold (hillock, clod, tuber) and German Knolle (bulb).

Noun

knoll (plural knolls)

  1. A small mound or rounded hill.
Derived terms
  • Brent Knoll
Translations

Etymology 2

Imitative, or variant of knell.

Noun

knoll (plural knolls)

  1. A knell.

Verb

knoll (third-person singular simple present knolls, present participle knolling, simple past and past participle knolled)

  1. (transitive) To ring (a bell) mournfully; to knell.
  2. (transitive, intransitive) To sound (something) like a bell; to knell.
    • ?, Alfred Tennyson, The Gardener's Daughter; or, The Pictures
      Heavy clocks knolling the drowsy hours.

Etymology 3

Named after Knoll, a furniture fabrication shop, famous for its angular range of designer furniture.

Verb

knoll (third-person singular simple present knolls, present participle knolling, simple past and past participle knolled)

  1. To arrange related objects in parallel or at 90 degree angles.

References

  • Guus Kroonen, “Reflections on the o/zero-Ablaut in the Germanic Iterative Verbs”, in The Indo-European Verb: Proceedings of the Conference of the Society for Indo-European Studies, Los Angeles, 13-15 September 2010, Wiesbaden: Reichert Verlag, 2012

Westrobothnian

Verb

knoll (preterite knollä)

  1. (transitive) roll together: make curly

Related terms

  • knóllär

knoll From the web:

  • knoll meaning
  • what knolly mean
  • knoll what is the definition
  • knolls what is
  • what does knoll mean
  • what is knoll in geography
  • what does knell mean
  • what is knolling photography


knowe

English

Etymology 1

Noun

knowe (plural knowes)

  1. (chiefly Scotland and Ulster) A small hill; a knoll.

Etymology 2

Verb

knowe

  1. Obsolete spelling of know

Anagrams

  • Keown, woken

Middle English

Verb

knowe

  1. Alternative form of knowen

Scots

Etymology

From Old English cnoll (summit).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [n?u], [kn?u]
  • (Mid Northern Scots) IPA(key): [tn?u]

Noun

knowe (plural knowes)

  1. knoll, hillock, hillside, field head

knowe From the web:

  • what knowest thou meaning
  • what knoweth meaning
  • knocked means
  • knower meaning
  • knower what's in your heart
  • knower what's in your heart lyrics
  • what man knoweth the things of a man
  • what is knower gaze in education
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