different between serose vs sepose

serose

English

Adjective

serose (comparative more serose, superlative most serose)

  1. (obsolete) serous
    • 1662, Henry More, An Antidote Against Atheism, Book I, A Collection of Several Philosophical Writings of Dr. Henry More, p. 45:
      "But the Butter is not pressed at all, as appears in that no serose humour is squeezed out of it..."

Anagrams

  • sorees

serose From the web:

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  • what series to watch on netflix
  • what series should i watch
  • what series is apple watch se
  • what series is the newest apple watch
  • what series should i watch on netflix
  • what series to watch on amazon prime
  • what series apple watch is out


sepose

English

Etymology

Latin se- (aside) + English pose.

Verb

sepose (third-person singular simple present seposes, present participle seposing, simple past and past participle seposed)

  1. (obsolete, transitive) To set apart.
  2. (obsolete, intransitive) To go apart.

Synonyms

  • (set apart): See also Thesaurus:set apart

Anagrams

  • eposes, poeses

sepose From the web:

  • what does deposed mean
  • what does it mean to get deposed
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