glass |
jewel |
As proper nouns the difference between glass and jewel
is that
glass is while
jewel is from the noun jewel, used since the end of the 19th century.
glass |
flour |
As a proper noun glass
is .
As a noun flour is
powder obtained by grinding or milling cereal grains, especially wheat, and used to bake bread, cakes, and pastry.
As a verb flour is
to apply flour to something; to cover with flour.
opaque |
glass |
As an adjective opaque
is neither reflecting nor emitting light.
As a noun opaque
is (obsolete|poetic) an area of darkness; a place or region with no light.
As a verb opaque
is to make, render (more) opaque.
As a proper noun glass is
.
wide |
glass |
As an adjective wide
is having a large physical extent from side to side.
As an adverb wide
is extensively.
As a noun wide
is (cricket) a ball that passes so far from the batsman that the umpire deems it unplayable; the arm signal used by an umpire to signal a wide; the extra run added to the batting side's score.
As a proper noun glass is
.
jar |
glass |
As an initialism jar
is (software|java).
As a proper noun glass is
.
diamond |
glass |
As proper nouns the difference between diamond and glass
is that
diamond is of modern usage, from the name of the gem while
glass is .
glass |
mud |
As a proper noun glass
is .
As an adjective mud is
.
glass |
len |
As a proper noun glass
is .
As a noun len is
fief, the domain of a feoffee.
glass |
false |
As a proper noun glass
is .
As an adjective false is
(
label) one of two states of a boolean variable; logic.
he |
glass |
As an adverb he
is now.
As a proper noun glass is
.
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