Candy vs Mandy - What's the difference?
candy | mandy |
(uncountable, chiefly, US) Edible, sweet-tasting confectionery containing sugar, or sometimes artificial sweeteners, and often flavored with fruit, chocolate, nuts, herbs and spices, or artificial flavors.
*
(countable, chiefly, US) A piece of confectionery of this kind.
*
(cooking) To cook in, or coat with, sugar syrup.
To have sugar crystals form in or on.
To be formed into candy; to solidify in a candylike form or mass.
(obsolete) a unit of mass used in southern India, equal to twenty maunds, roughly equal to 500 pounds avoirdupois but varying locally.
. Popular as a formal given name in the U.K. in the 1960s and 1970s.
* 1928 Joyce Lankester Brisley: Milly-Molly-Mandy Stories . Chapter 1:
* 1994 P.D.James: Original Sin ISBN 0679438890 page 10:
As nouns the difference between candy and mandy
is that candy is edible, sweet-tasting confectionery containing sugar, or sometimes artificial sweeteners, and often flavored with fruit, chocolate, nuts, herbs and spices, or artificial flavors while mandy is the drug MDMA.As proper nouns the difference between candy and mandy
is that candy is a pet form of the female given name Candace or Candice while Mandy is {{given name|female|diminutive=Amanda}}. Popular as a formal given name in the U.K. in the 1960s and 1970s.As a verb candy
is to cook in, or coat with, sugar syrup.candy
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) sucre candi ("candy sugar"), from (etyl) .Noun
Synonyms
* (confection) confectionery, sweets (British), lollies (Australia), sugar candy (US) * (piece of candy) sweet (British), lolly (Australia)Derived terms
* arm candy * bee candy * brain candy * candy ass * candy cane * candy floss * candy man * candy store * candy stripe * candy striper * cotton candy * ear candy * eye candy * hard candy * like taking candy from a baby * nose candy * rock candy * sugar candyVerb
- Fruits preserved in sugar candy after a time.
Etymology 2
From (etyl) .Alternative forms
* candeeNoun
(candy)Synonyms
* mauneeAnagrams
*mandy
English
Proper noun
(en-proper noun) (plural Mandys )- But Mother and Father and Grandpa and Grandma and Uncle and Aunty couldn't very well call out "Millicent Margaret Amanda" every time they wanted her, so they shortened it to "Milly-Molly-Mandy " which is quite easy to say.
- Without looking up, she asked: "Is your name Mandy or Amanda Price?"
- "Mandy', Miss Etienne." In other circumstances ' Mandy would have pointed out that if her name were Amanda the CV would have said so.
