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Conde vs Coned - What's the difference?

conde | coned |

As a noun conde

is cop, rozzer (uk ).

As an adjective coned is

(of an area) segregated or delineated by traffic cones.

As a verb coned is

(cone).

conde

English

Noun

  • (en noun) Variant spelling of conn
  • The duty of directing a ship, usually used with the verb to have'' or '' to take and accompanied by the article "the."
  • The officer of the deck has the conde of the vessel; the captain took the conde when he reached the bridge.

    Verb

  • (rare) To direct a ship.
  • The pilot conded the ship safely into the harbor.
    ----

    coned

    English

    Adjective

    (-)
  • (of an area) segregated or delineated by traffic cones
  • *{{quote-book, title=Fun and Games: 100 Sport-related Activites for Ages 5-16
  • , author=Anthony Dowson, Keith E. J. Morris , publisher=Human Kinetics , year=2005 , isbn=9780736054386 , page=144 , chapter=Soccer Games citation , passage=Give each participant a soccer ball and instruct them to dribble their ball around the coned area.}}

    Verb

    (head)
  • (cone)
  • He coned the top of the pottery to make it look like a dunce cap.

    Anagrams

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