different between yale vs nale

yale

English

Alternative forms

  • eale

Etymology

Possibly derived from Hebrew ?????? (mountain goat). Possibly from Welsh iâl (clearing, glade). Compare Latin eale.

Noun

yale (plural yales)

  1. A mythical beast in European mythology and heraldry, usually portrayed as an antelope- or goat-like four-legged creature with large horns that it can swivel in any direction.
  2. A fertile upland.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Ealy, Yael, aley, ayle, laye

Swahili

Alternative forms

  • yaleyale

Adjective

yale

  1. Ma class inflected form of -le.

yale From the web:

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  • what yale lock do i have
  • what yale is known for
  • what yale thing
  • what yale university is known for
  • what yale alarm do i have
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nale

English

Etymology

A corrupt form arising from the older "at þen ale".

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ne?l/
  • Homophone: nail

Noun

nale

  1. (obsolete) ale
  2. (obsolete) An alehouse.
    • great feastes at the nale

Anagrams

  • Alne, ELAN, Lane, Lean, Lena, Neal, elan, enal, lane, lean, neal, élan

Silesian

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *a le, from Proto-Indo-European *ályos.

Conjunction

nale

  1. but

nale From the web:

  • what's naledi in english
  • naleul meaning
  • what naleyah mean
  • what does kaleigh mean
  • what does naleku mean
  • what does nale mean
  • what does naleo stand for
  • what is nalesh holdings
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