different between sandy vs wandy
sandy
English
Etymology
From Middle English sandi, sondy, sandi?, from Old English sandi? (“sandy”), equivalent to sand +? -y. Cognate with Dutch zandig (“sandy”), German sandig (“sandy”), Swedish sandig (“sandy”).
Pronunciation
- enPR: s?n'di, IPA(key): /?sændi/
- Rhymes: -ændi
- Homophone: sandhi
Adjective
sandy (comparative sandier, superlative sandiest)
- Covered with sand.
- Sprinkled with sand.
- Containing sand.
- Some plants grow best in sandy soil.
- Like sand, especially in texture.
- Having the colour of sand.
Derived terms
- Great Sandy Desert
- pecan sandy
- sandy blight
- Sandy Hook
- sandyish
Translations
See also
- Appendix:Colors
sandy From the web:
- what sandy means
- what sandy soil
- what sandy loam soil
- what's sandy short for
- what sandy said
- what's sandy clam
- what sandy clay loam
- what sandy in english
wandy
English
Etymology
wand +? -y
Adjective
wandy (comparative more wandy, superlative most wandy)
- (Britain, dialect) Long and flexible, like a wand.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Brockett to this entry?)
wandy From the web:
- what wandy means
- what does wandy mean
- what does wandy name mean
- what does wendy mean in chinese
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- sandy vs wandy
- brusk vs brief
- brusk vs terse
- peremptory vs brusk
- curt vs brusk
- busk vs brusk
- rusk vs brusk
- brush vs brusk
- brusk vs brisk
- endoskeletal vs endoskeletally
- torch vs lightbulb
- torch vs sparkler
- tent vs torch
- food vs torch
- bulb vs torch
- torch vs ignition
- torch vs afflict
- torch vs flare
- torch vs scorch
- lamp vs luminaire