different between overseal vs oversea
overseal
English
Etymology
over- +? seal
Verb
overseal (third-person singular simple present overseals, present participle oversealing, simple past and past participle oversealed)
- (transitive) To close with a seal at the top.
Noun
overseal (plural overseals)
- A seal at the top of something, to close it.
Anagrams
- oversale, rose veal
overseal From the web:
oversea
English
Etymology
From Middle English over-se, over see, ouer sea, from Old English ofer s? (literally “over/across (the) sea”); equivalent to over +? sea. Compare West Frisian oerseesk, Dutch overzee, German Übersee, Danish oversøisk.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??v?(?)si?/
- Hyphenation: over?sea
- Rhymes: -i?
- Homophone: oversea
Adjective
oversea (not comparable)
- (chiefly Britain) Alternative form of overseas
Adverb
oversea (not comparable)
- (chiefly Britain) Alternative form of overseas
Derived terms
- overseas
References
- “oversea” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
- Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.
oversea From the web:
- what overseas means
- what overseas travel is allowed
- what overseas country
- what does overseas mean
- in overseas or overseas
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- overseal vs oversea
- oversea vs overset
- oversew vs oversea
- oversea vs offshore
- stress vs elbowgrease
- work vs elbowgrease
- power vs elbowgrease
- labour vs elbowgrease
- strain vs elbowgrease
- energy vs elbowgrease
- trouble vs elbowgrease
- force vs elbowgrease
- industry vs elbowgrease
- struggle vs elbowgrease
- pranking vs scamming
- pranking vs planking
- terms vs pranking
- tranking vs pranking
- pranking vs pronking
- pranging vs pranking