sam |
michael |
As an adjective sam
is (
etymology 1 only, spelled specifically to distinguish it from etymology 2 ).
As a proper noun michael is
, a variant of michel, popular in the end of the 20th century.
john |
michael |
As proper nouns the difference between john and michael
is that
john is a given name derived from Hebrew very popular since the Middle Ages while
Michael is a given name derived from Hebrew.
As a noun john
is a prostitute's client.
michael |
andrew |
As proper nouns the difference between michael and andrew
is that
michael is a given name derived from Hebrew while
Andrew is the first Apostle in the New Testament.
tony |
michael |
As an adjective tony
is stylish, high-toned, upscale.
As a noun tony
is (archaic) a simpleton.
As a proper noun michael is
, a variant of michel, popular in the end of the 20th century.
eric |
michael |
In given name|male|lang=fr terms the difference between eric and michael
is that
eric is , cognate to eric while
michael is , a variant of michel, popular in the end of the 20th century.
As proper nouns the difference between eric and michael
is that
eric is , cognate to eric while
michael is , a variant of michel, popular in the end of the 20th century.
michael |
thomas |
As proper nouns the difference between michael and thomas
is that
michael is , a variant of michel, popular in the end of the 20th century while
thomas is an apostle, best remembered for doubting the resurrection of jesus.
As a noun thomas is
(derogatory|christianity) an infidel (
in reference to the doubting apostle).
callee |
michael |
As a noun callee
is (telephony) the person who is called by the caller (on the telephone).
As a proper noun michael is
, a variant of michel, popular in the end of the 20th century.
mark |
michael |
As a noun mark
is sign.
As a proper noun michael is
, a variant of michel, popular in the end of the 20th century.
ryan |
michael |
As proper nouns the difference between ryan and michael
is that
ryan is {{surname|from=Irish}} common in Ireland while
Michael is a given name derived from Hebrew.
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