Lewis vs Jake - What's the difference?
lewis | jake |
of Norman origin, the English form of Louis.
; anglicized form of Llewellyn.
The , Scotland.
The title given to a partially apprenticed Freemason who is normally the Master or Son of a practicing Freemason; One practising or learning the degrees of Freemasonry after introduction to the degrees and before full induction or before becoming a Worshipful Brother.
(slang) Adequate; satisfactory; acceptable.
*1939 , (Raymond Chandler), The Big Sleep , Penguin 2011, p. 126:
*:‘What do you care? Just keep your nose clean and everything will be jake .’
(US) A juvenile male turkey.
* 1998 , Jerome B Robinson, In the Turkey Woods
As nouns the difference between lewis and jake
is that lewis is a cramp iron inserted into a cavity in order to lift heavy stones; used as a symbol of strength in freemasonry while jake is collar.As an interjection jake is
come.lewis
English
Proper noun
(en proper noun)Derived terms
* Holstein-Lewis fracture * Lewis acid * Lewis base * LewisianQuotations
* 1595 William Shakespeare: Third Part of King Henry the Sixth : Act III, Scene III: *: And tell false Edward, thy supposed king, *: That Lewis of France is sending over masquers, *: To revel it with him and his new bride. * 1994 Joseph Heller: Closing Time ISBN 0671746049 page 42: *: They named me Lewis and called me Louie as though my name was Louis, and I never saw the difference until Sammy pointed it out. And even then, I still don't see much difference.See also
* - physical chemistAnagrams
*jake
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Noun
(en noun)- The spring turkey woods are occupied by roaming bands of jakes — year-old males with strong mating urges but inferior body size.