different between setose vs sepose
setose
English
Alternative forms
- setous
Etymology
Latin setosus, saetosus, from seta (“bristle”), saeta (“bristle”).
Adjective
setose (comparative more setose, superlative most setose)
- Thickly set with bristles or bristly hairs.
Derived terms
- asetose
- multisetose
Anagrams
- Osetes, Ossete, sees to, toeses
Italian
Adjective
setose
- feminine plural of setoso
Anagrams
- esteso
Latin
Adjective
s?t?se
- vocative masculine singular of s?t?sus
setose From the web:
- what is setose crayfish
- what does seto mean
- what is setae in biology
- what does setose
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)
- (obsolete, transitive) To set apart.
- (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
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- setose vs sepose
- sepose vs repose
- sepose vs sepoose
- depose vs sepose
- seposes vs sepses
- decokes vs decoses
- deposest vs reposest
- deposers vs deponers
- deposers vs reposers
- depowers vs deposers
- despose vs unleash
- terms vs mistreading
- mistreading vs misthreading
- mistreading vs mistreating
- misguided vs misguides
- misguides vs misguiders
- pranam vs prana
- pranam vs pranama
- prahu vs prahm
- pram vs prahm