different between noone vs moone

noone

English

Etymology 1

From no +? one. Compare Middle English noone, noon, noan (noone). More at none.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?n??w?n/

Pronoun

noone

  1. Nonstandard spelling of no one.
Usage notes
  • Noone is formed in parallel to the formation of nobody, anyone, and everyone, but it is not preferred because of the doubled vowels creating a temptation to read and pronounce it as "noon" (/nu?n/).
  • American users (COCA) prefer the spelling no one to either noone or no-one by more than 500 to 1.
  • UK users (BNC) prefer no-one to noone 50 to 1 and no one to noone 12 to 1.

Etymology 2

From Middle English none, noune, from Old English n?n (noon; the ninth hour). Cognate with Dutch noen, Icelandic nón. More at noon.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?nu?n/

Noun

noone (plural noones)

  1. Obsolete form of noon.

Further reading

  • (noone*50), no one at Google Ngram Viewer

noone From the web:

  • what no one tells you
  • what no one knows about me
  • what no one is talking about
  • what noone means
  • no one knows
  • what does mooned mean
  • what does nooner mean
  • what does nooned mean ifunny


moone

English

Noun

moone

  1. Obsolete spelling of moon
  2. Obsolete spelling of moan
  3. Obsolete spelling of mone

Verb

moone

  1. Obsolete spelling of moan

Middle English

Noun

moone

  1. Alternative form of mone (moon)

moone From the web:

  • what mooned mean
  • what mooney means
  • what mooney to buy
  • what's mooney in irish
  • mooner meaning
  • mooned what does it mean
  • what does mooned someone mean
  • what is mooney viscosity
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