different between unfear vs unnear

unfear

English

Etymology

From un- +? fear.

Noun

unfear (uncountable)

  1. Absence of fear; fearlessness.
    • 2009, John Hough, Seen the Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Gettysburg (page 163)
      It would have been easy now to run on home and beat him there but she did not. She let some seconds go by in which her unfear of him—if unfear it was—would proclaim itself, then turned, with her parasol and basket. “what is it,” she said.

Anagrams

  • furane

unfear From the web:



unnear

English

Etymology

un- +? near

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?n?n??(?)/

Preposition

unnear

  1. (chiefly obsolete) Not near; at a distance from.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of John Davies (Muse's Sacrifice) to this entry?)
    • 2000, Harry Guest, The Artist on the Artist
      easy wheatfields of the Berry where Joseph was born (not unnear George Sand's beloved home at Nohant)

Anagrams

  • unearn

unnear From the web:

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