Companion vs Spouse - What's the difference?
companion | spouse |
A friend, acquaintance, or partner; someone with whom one spends time or keeps company
* Shakespeare
(dated) A person employed to accompany or travel with another.
(nautical) The framework on the quarterdeck of a sailing ship through which daylight entered the cabins below.
(nautical) The covering of a hatchway on an upper deck which leads to the companionway; the stairs themselves.
(topology) A knot in whose neighborhood another, specified knot meets every meridian disk.
(figuratively) A thing or phenomenon that is closely associated with another thing, phenomenon, or person.
(astronomy) A celestial object that is associated with another.
A knight of the lowest rank in certain orders.
(obsolete, derogatory) A fellow; a rogue.
* 1599 , , III. i. 111:
A person's husband or wife.
* Spenser
(dated) To wed; to espouse.
* 1819 , , Otho the Great , Act III, Scene II, verses 212-214
In dated|lang=en terms the difference between companion and spouse
is that companion is (dated) a person employed to accompany or travel with another while spouse is (dated) to wed; to espouse.As nouns the difference between companion and spouse
is that companion is a friend, acquaintance, or partner; someone with whom one spends time or keeps company while spouse is a person's husband or wife.As verbs the difference between companion and spouse
is that companion is (obsolete) to be a companion to; to attend on; to accompany while spouse is (dated) to wed; to espouse.companion
English
Noun
(en noun)- His dog has been his trusted companion for the last five years.
- Here are your sons again; and I must lose / Two of the sweetest companions in the world.
- a companion of the Bath
- and let us knog our / prains together to be revenge on this same scald, scurvy, / cogging companion ,
Synonyms
* See alsoDerived terms
* companionable, uncompanionable * companion hatch * companion ladder * companionship * companionwayspouse
English
Noun
(en noun)- People should treat their spouses with respect.
- At last such grace I found, and means I wrought, / That I that lady to my spouse had won.
Derived terms
* spousal (pos a)Verb
- Do you stand possess’d
- Of any proof against the honourableness
- Of Lady Auranthe, our new-spoused daughter?
