Awn vs Gawn - What's the difference?
awn | gawn |
The bristle or beard of barley, oats, grasses, etc., or any similar bristlelike appendage; arista.
(eye dialect) Eye dialect spelling of certain regional pronunciations of going.
*1841 , Susan Edmonstone Ferrier, The Inheritance , page 8:
*2007 , Jacqueline Wales, When the Crow Sings , page 110:
*2014 , Charles R. Allen, 99 Cent Adventure Time Stories: The House of Weird Sleep , page 3:
As nouns the difference between awn and gawn
is that awn is the bristle or beard of barley, oats, grasses, etc, or any similar bristlelike appendage; arista while gawn is (obsolete|uk|dialect) a small tub or lading vessel.As a verb gawn is
(eye dialect) eye dialect spelling of certain regional pronunciations of going.awn
English
Noun
(en noun)Anagrams
* * ----gawn
English
Etymology 1
Corrupted from (gallon).Etymology 2
Corrupted from (going)Verb
(head)- I'm no used to your grandees, and I'm no gawn' to begin to learn fashionable mainners noo — so dinna ask me — I'm no ' gawn to mak a fule o' mysel' at this time o' day.
- Agnes came in dressed in nightgown and curlers. “Are we still gawn' to the church bingo the night? I told Bessie I'd be ' gawn .”
- “Ah'm gawn' to tear yore skin off with this here whip,” came the guttural voice from behind him. “Then ah'm ' gawn to rub salt in the cuts an' leave you hyar on the floor.”