karen |
cat |
As a noun karen
is .
As an adverb cat is
how much.
As an adjective cat is
how much.
kk |
karen |
As an initialism kk
is okay okay; indicates that no further explanation is necessary for a subject, or that the message was understood and will be acted upon without further confirmation.
As a proper noun Karen is
{{given name|female|from=Ancient Greek}}. First taken up as a given name in the U.S.A., and popular in the English-speaking world from the 1950s to the 1970s.
karen |
kiki |
As proper nouns the difference between karen and kiki
is that
karen is {{given name|female|from=Ancient Greek}}. First taken up as a given name in the U.S.A., and popular in the English-speaking world from the 1950s to the 1970s while
Kiki is a pet form of several female given names beginning with "K".
As a noun kiki is
a gathering of friends for the purpose of gossiping and chit-chat.
kelli |
karen |
As a verb kelli
is .
As a noun karen is
.
karen |
adrian |
As a noun karen
is .
As a proper noun adrian is
; the spanish equivalent of adrian.
karen |
linda |
As proper nouns the difference between karen and linda
is that
karen is {{given name|female|from=Ancient Greek}}. First taken up as a given name in the U.S.A., and popular in the English-speaking world from the 1950s to the 1970s while
Linda is {{given name|female|from=Germanic}}.
boomer |
karen |
As nouns the difference between boomer and karen
is that
boomer is an adult male kangaroo while
karen is .
chase |
karen |
As a proper noun chase
is a botanical plant name author abbreviation for botanist mary agnes chase (1869-1963).
As a noun karen is
.
zoe |
karen |
As proper nouns the difference between zoe and karen
is that
zoe is {{given name|female|from=Ancient Greek}}, a common spelling variant of Zoë while
Karen is {{given name|female|from=Ancient Greek}}. First taken up as a given name in the U.S.A., and popular in the English-speaking world from the 1950s to the 1970s.
kyle |
karen |
As proper nouns the difference between kyle and karen
is that
kyle is {{surname|habitational|from=Scottish Gaelic} while
Karen is {{given name|female|from=Ancient Greek}}. First taken up as a given name in the U.S.A., and popular in the English-speaking world from the 1950s to the 1970s.
As a noun kyle
is in Scotland A narrow channel between islands.
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