Lacey vs Lacery - What's the difference?
lacey | lacery |
from a place Lassy in Calvados.
, transferred from the surname, mostly in the nineteenth century.
of modern usage.
Lace or laces collectively.
Something interlaced.
As a proper noun Lacey
is {{surname|Norman habitational|from=Old French}} from a place Lassy in Calvados.As an adjective lacey
is an alternative spelling of lang=en.As a noun lacery is
lace or laces collectively.lacey
English
Alternative forms
*LacyProper noun
(en proper noun)Quotations
* 1993 , Pigs in Heaven , ISBN 0060922532, page 322 *: "Where'd you get a prissy name like Lacey from, anyway?" *: "I don't know," Cash tells Alice, keeping his hands on the wheel and his eye trained ahead. "It was Alma thought of it. I think she liked the TV show with the lady cops. Lacey and somebody."lacery
English
Noun
(laceries)- The room contained a lacery of wires and cables.