firn |
ice |
As nouns the difference between firn and ice
is that
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions while
ice is .
firn |
|
wikidiffcom |
firn |
Wikidiffcom is likely misspelled.
Wikidiffcom has no English definition.
As a noun firn is
a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions.
morphology |
firn |
As nouns the difference between morphology and firn
is that
morphology is (uncountable) a scientific study of form and structure, usually without regard to function especially: while
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions.
fern |
firn |
As nouns the difference between fern and firn
is that
fern is any of a group of some twenty thousand species of vascular plants classified in the division Pteridophyta that lack seeds and reproduce by shedding spores to initiate an alternation of generations while
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions.
As a proper noun Fern
is {{given name|female}} from the fern plant.
forn |
firn |
As nouns the difference between forn and firn
is that
forn is sacrifice while
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions.
firn |
girn |
As nouns the difference between firn and girn
is that
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions while
girn is a vocalization similar to a cat's purring.
As a verb girn is
(
label) to grimace; to snarl.
fir |
firn |
As nouns the difference between fir and firn
is that
fir is (chiefly|countable|british) any conifer of a variety of genera, especially a scots pine,
pinus sylvestris'' or a (true fir) (''abies ) while
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions.
fetch |
firn |
As nouns the difference between fetch and firn
is that
fetch is the object of fetching; the source and origin of attraction; a force, quality or propensity which is attracting eg, in a given attribute of person, place, object, principle, etc while
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions.
As a verb fetch
is to retrieve; to bear towards; to go and get.
As an adjective fetch
is (slang) attractive, popular.
firn |
pirn |
As nouns the difference between firn and pirn
is that
firn is a type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions while
pirn is a cone shaped spool or bobbin on which thread or yarn is wound used most often for weaving.
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