attire |
dizen |
As verbs the difference between attire and dizen
is that
attire is while
dizen is to dress with flax for spinning.
clothes |
dizen |
As verbs the difference between clothes and dizen
is that
clothes is (
clothe) while
dizen is to dress with flax for spinning.
As a noun clothes
is (plural only) items of clothing; apparel.
spinning |
dizen |
As verbs the difference between spinning and dizen
is that
spinning is while
dizen is to dress with flax for spinning.
As an adjective spinning
is rapidly rotating on an axis; whirling.
As a noun spinning
is the motion of something that spins.
flax |
dizen |
As a noun flax
is a plant of the genus
linum , especially , which has a single, slender stalk, about a foot and a half high, with blue flowers also known as linseed, especially when referring to the seeds.
As a verb dizen is
to dress with flax for spinning.
dress |
dizen |
As verbs the difference between dress and dizen
is that
dress is (obsolete|reflexive|intransitive) to prepare oneself; to make ready while
dizen is to dress with flax for spinning.
As a noun dress
is (countable) an item of clothing (usually worn by a woman or young girl) which both covers the upper part of the body and includes skirts below the waist.
dizen |
dize |
In lang=en terms the difference between dizen and dize
is that
dizen is to dress with clothes; attire; deck; bedizen while
dize is to dress with flax for spinning, as a distaff; dizen.
In uk|_|dialectal|lang=en terms the difference between dizen and dize
is that
dizen is to dress showily; adorn; dress out while
dize is to put tow on a distaff.
As verbs the difference between dizen and dize
is that
dizen is to dress with flax for spinning while
dize is to dress with flax for spinning, as a distaff; dizen.
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