hoidening |
hoodening |
As a verb hoidening
is present participle of hoiden.
As a noun hoodening is
an old English tradition of ploughing teams, who would carry a wooden horse's head on a pole and ask for money from local landowners.
landowner |
hoodening |
As nouns the difference between landowner and hoodening
is that
landowner is a person who owns land while
hoodening is an old english tradition of ploughing teams, who would carry a wooden horse's head on a pole and ask for money from local landowners.
plough |
hoodening |
As a proper noun plough
is (constellation|british) the common name for the brightest seven stars of the constellation ursa major.
As a noun hoodening is
an old english tradition of ploughing teams, who would carry a wooden horse's head on a pole and ask for money from local landowners.
tradition |
hoodening |
As nouns the difference between tradition and hoodening
is that
tradition is a part of culture that is passed from person to person or generation to generation, possibly differing in detail from family to family, such as the way to celebrate holidays while
hoodening is an old English tradition of ploughing teams, who would carry a wooden horse's head on a pole and ask for money from local landowners.
As a verb tradition
is to transmit by way of tradition; to hand down.
english |
hoodening |
As nouns the difference between english and hoodening
is that
english is (us) spinning or rotary motion given to a ball around the vertical axis, as in billiards or bowling while
hoodening is an old english tradition of ploughing teams, who would carry a wooden horse's head on a pole and ask for money from local landowners.
hodening |
hoodening |
Alternative forms |
Hoodening is a alternative form of hodening.
As nouns the difference between hodening and hoodening
is that
hodening is an alternative spelling of hoodening while
hoodening is an old English tradition of ploughing teams, who would carry a wooden horse's head on a pole and ask for money from local landowners.