Julie vs Juliet - What's the difference?
julie | juliet |
. Popular in the latter half of the twentieth century.
* 1813 , Tracy , Poems by George Crabbe, Adolphus William Ward,The University Press 1907, page 455:
* 1917 , Cousin Julia , D. Appleton and Company, page 3:
* 2000 Jayne Anne Phillips: Mother Kind : page 156:
.
* 1977 , The Wars , Delacorte Press/S. Lawrence, ISBN 044009397X, page 110:
One of the main characters of .
* , Scene III:
A woman who is or is with a great lover.
By analogy with the Shakespearean character, a woman who is in love with a man from a family, party, or country opposing that of her own.
(astronomy) ] The sixth moon of the planet Uranus.
The letter J in the ICAO spelling alphabet.
Juliet is a related term of julie.
As proper nouns the difference between julie and juliet
is that julie is {{given name|female|from=French|}}. Popular in the latter half of the twentieth century while Juliet is {{given name|female|from=Latin}}.julie
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)- The first-born Child had every dawning Grace / And promis'd Beauty in her form and face. / "We'll call her Julie' if you please, my dear," / The Mother cry'd, "I doat on ' Julie Vere." / "What! no Remembrance of her Aunt! for Shame! / You doat indeed! be Barbara her name!"
- "I loathe the name of Julia. Julie , in the French way, is quite pretty, but Julia! - "
- "Call her Cousin Julie then; I've no doubt she'll prefer it. She's nothing if not progressive, I believe."
- They were called Jim & Julie , professionally. It seemed such a waste to deal in fantasy, in illusion and pretend, and not christen one's endeavor more suggestively. Kate wondered if their real names were Letitia and Sylvester, or Cleopatra and Mandrake; perhaps they'd gone undercover with white-bread names in quest of posh children's parties and Yankee suitability.
juliet
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)- "All I ask," she says, fitting the cigarette into a holder, "is that you don't call me Juli-et'''''. I cannot abide '''Juli-''et'' . It maddens me!" "Yes, ma'am." "Here, we say Joolyut. ''Joolyut. Joolyut . Say it for me."
- For never was a story of more woe / Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.