Laban vs Alban - What's the difference?
laban | alban |
The brother of Rebekah and uncle of Jacob and Esau.
* 1611 , 25:20
of biblical origin.
.
* : Act II, Scene I
(historical) Pertaining to the ancient Latin city of Alba Longa.
* 1847 , Leonhard Schmitz, A History of Rome: From the Earliest Times to the Death of Commodus, A.D. 192 , Harper & brothers, page 14:
* 1922 , Sir James George Frazer, AThe Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion , Forgotten Books, page 152:
* 1998 , Robert Alan Gurval, Actium and Augustus: The Politics and Emotions of Civil War , University of Michigan Press, page 223:
(historical) Pertaining to Alba, or the area now covered by Scotland.
*2011 , (Norman Davies), Vanished Kingdoms , Penguin 2012, p. 66:
*:At some point during the Picto-Gaelic fusion, St Andrew was adopted as patron of the Alban kingdom.
As nouns the difference between laban and alban
is that laban is (uncommon) while alban is (chemistry|obsolete) a white crystalline resinous substance extracted from gutta-percha by the action of alcohol or ether.laban
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)- And Isaac was forty years old when he took Rebekah to wife, the daughter of Bethuel the Syrian of Padan-aram, the sister to Laban the Syrian.
Anagrams
* * *alban
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)- Forsooth, a blind man at Saint Alban' s shrine
- Within this half hour hath receiv'd his sight
Usage notes
* Though borne by the first British martyr, the given name has always been rare in English.Adjective
(-)- But beside this, there existed at Lavinium another tradition, which inverts the order of things by stating that Lavinium was an Alban' colony, founded by six hundred ' Alban families.
- Now the Alban dynasti bore the name of Silvii or Wood, and it can hardly be without significance that in the vision of the historic glories of Rome revealed to Aeneas in the underworld, Virgil, an antiquary as well as a poet, should represent all the line of Silvii as crowned with oak.
- Reminded of the Alban king’s descent from Silvius, the son of Aeneas, Vergil’s reader must judge the crime of Mettus and his gruesome punishment with greater horror and revulsion.