Evener vs Evene - What's the difference?
evener | evene |
(even)
* {{quote-book, year=1853, author=Samuel Strickland, title=Twenty-Seven Years in Canada West, chapter=, edition=
, passage=I prefer the white pine, because it is less liable to gutter with the rain, and makes an evener roof. }}
One who, or that which, makes even.
* 1966 , Wilfred Healey Stone, The Cave and the Mountain: A Study of E. M. Forster (page 254)
(dated) In vehicles, a swinging crossbar, to the ends of which other crossbars, or whiffletrees, are hung, to equalize the draught when two or three horses are used abreast.
(obsolete) To occur; to happen; to come to pass.
*1662 , Thomas Salusbury, Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems (Dialogue Two).
*:What would evene , if an eagle that is carried by the course of the wind, should let a stone fall from its talons.
As an adjective evener
is comparative of even.As a noun evener
is one who, or that which, makes even.As a verb evene is
to occur; to happen; to come to pass.evener
English
Adjective
(head)citation
Noun
(en noun)- Hers is not simply a plea for the value of tragedy, for that awareness of death which increases incentives for life; it is rather a negative use of death as the great leveler, the evener of scores.
