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Champion vs Champaign - What's the difference?

champion | champaign |

As a proper noun champion

is .

As a noun champaign is

(geography|archaic) open countryside, or an area of open countryside.

As an adjective champaign is

pertaining to open countryside; unforested, flat.

champion

Noun

(en noun)
  • Someone who has been a winner in a contest.
  • (rfex-sense) Someone who is chosen to represent a group of people in a contest.
  • Someone who fights for a cause or status.
  • Someone who fights on another's behalf.
  • Adjective

    (-)
  • (label) Acting as a champion; that has defeated all one's competitors.
  • (label) Excellent; beyond compare.
  • Excellent; superb; deserving of high praise.
  • Verb

    (en verb)
  • to promote, advocate, or act as a champion for
  • References

    * * * * ----

    champaign

    English

    Alternative forms

    * champeyne * champaine * champain

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (geography, archaic) Open countryside, or an area of open countryside.
  • *:
  • *:And therwith torned theyr horses and rode ouer waters and thurgh woodes tyl they came to theyre busshement / where as syr Lyonel and syr Bedeuer were houyng / The romayns folowed fast after on horsbak and on foote ouer a ch?payn vnto a wood
  • *1605 , William Shakespeare, King Lear , I.i:
  • *:Of all these bounds even from this line to this, / With shadowy forests and with champaigns riched, / With plenteous rivers and wide-skirted meads, / We make thee lady.
  • *, II.ii.3:
  • *:So Segrave in Leicestershireis sited in a champaign at the edge of the wolds, and more barren than the villages about it, yet no place likely yields a better air.
  • (obsolete) A battlefield.
  • Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • Pertaining to open countryside; unforested, flat.
  • *, Folio Society, 2006, vol.1, p.206:
  • They are seated alongst the sea-coast, encompassed toward the land with huge and steepie mountains, having betweene both, a hundred leagues or thereabouts of open and champaine ground.