Franklin vs Francis - What's the difference?
franklin | francis |
(1706-1790), American author, scientist, inventor, and diplomat, and one of the Founding Fathers.
transferred from the surname, partly in honor of Benjamin Franklin.
A town in Alabama
A town in Arkansas
A town in Connecticut
A village in Georgia, USA
A city in Idaho
A village in Illinois
A city in Indiana
A city in Iowa
A city in Kentucky
A city in Louisiana
A town in Maine
A rural municipality in Manitoba, Canada
A town in Massachusetts
A village in Michigan
A city in Minnesota
A city in Missouri
A city in Nebraska
A city in New Hampshire
A borough in New Jersey
One of two towns in New York
A town in North Carolina
A city in Ohio
A city in Pennsylvania
A municipality in Quebec
A township and a river in Tasmania
A city in Tennessee
A town in Vermont
A city in Virginia
A town in West Virginia
A city and a few towns in Wisconsin
(US, informal) A one-hundred-dollar bill, which carries the portrait of Benjamin Franklin.
* ~1591 William Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet : Act V, Scene III:
* 1820 , Names , The Indicator, No. XVIII, February 9th, 1820:
* 2006 (Kate Atkinson), One Good Turn , Black Swan(2007), ISBN 9780552772440, page 454:
*:Francis had never been 'Frank' or 'Fran', he had always been called by his full name. It had lent him a certain dignity that he had possibly never earned.
, a rare spelling variant of Frances.
A ghost town in Nebraska.
A town in Saskatchewan, Canada.
A town in Utah.
As a noun franklin
is (obsolete except historical) a freeholder, especially as belonging to a class of landowners in the 14th and 15th century ranking below the gentry.As an adjective francis is
.franklin
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)Derived terms
* Franklin stoveSee also
* FrankNoun
(en noun)Synonyms
* Benjamin ----francis
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)- Saint Francis be my speed! how oft tonight / Have my old feet stumbled at graves!
- Francis is one of the pleasantest names in use. It has a fine open air with it, - a sound correspondent to its sense.