Joe vs Grill - What's the difference?
joe | grill |
A common nickname for Joseph, also used as a formal male given name.
* 1981 , Second Movement , Nebula Winners: Science Fiction Writers of America, Harper&Row, 1981, ISBN 0060148306, page 207
, Joanne or Josephine.
(transitive, Scotland, US) To make angry; provoke.
(transitive, chiefly, Scotland) To terrify; make tremble.
(intransitive, chiefly, Scotland) To tremble; shiver.
(intransitive, Northern England, Scotland) To snarl; snap.
harsh, rough, severe; cruel
harm
A rack; a grid of wire or a sheet of material with a pattern of holes or slots, usually used to protect something while allowing the passage of air and liquids. Typical uses: to allow air through a fan while preventing fingers or objects from passing; to allow people to talk to somebody, while preventing attack.
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On a vehicle, a slotted cover as above, to protect and hide the radiator, while admitting air to cool it.
A device comprising a source of radiant heat and a means of holding food near it, to cook it; a barbecue; a griddle.
(lb) A type of jewelry worn on the front teeth.
The front teeth regarded collectively.
Food cooked on a grill.
Humorous misspelling of
To cook food on a grill; to barbecue.
(Australian, NZ, UK) To cook food under the element of a stove or only under the top element of an oven – (US) broil, (cooking) salamander.
(colloquial) To interrogate; to question aggressively or harshly.
As nouns the difference between joe and grill
is that joe is (informal) a male; a guy; a fellow or joe can be (chiefly|us|informal) coffee while grill is grill.joe
English
(wikipedia Joe)Proper noun
(en proper noun)- "With a name like Joe'," '''Joe''' always said, "I had to open a bar and grill, just so I could put up a sign saying '' Joe' s Bar and Grill'."
Derived terms
* average Joe * Joe Average * Joe Blow * Joe College * Joe Schmoe * Joe SixpackSee also
* cup of joe * sloppy joe English diminutives of male given namesgrill
English
(wikipedia grill)Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Alternative forms
* (l)Verb
(en verb)Etymology 2
From (etyl) gril, .Adjective
(en-adj)Noun
(en-noun)Etymology 3
1655, from (etyl) gril, from (etyl), from (etyl) . Related to (l), (l).Alternative forms
(wikipedia) * grilleNoun
(en noun)- The house was a big elaborate limestone affair, evidently new. Winter sunshine sparkled on lace-hung casement, on glass marquise, and the burnished bronze foliations of grille and door.
Derived terms
* mixed grill * grillingVerb
(en verb)- Why don't we get together Saturday and grill some burgers?
- The police grilled him about his movements at the time of the crime.