As nouns the difference between ower and ownership
is that
ower is a person who owes money while
ownership is the state of having complete legal control of the status of something.
As a preposition ower
is (geordie) over.
As an adverb ower
is (geordie) over.
As an adjective ower
is (geordie) over, too.
ower English
Etymology 1
From the verb to owe .
Noun
( en noun)
A person who owes money.
Etymology 2
Colloquial variant of over .
Adverb
( -)
(Geordie) over
- She's ower canny hor, like
Adjective
( -)
(Geordie) over, too
- Thats ower much that!
References
*
*
*
Anagrams
*
----
|
ownership Noun
(ownerships)
The state of having complete legal control of the status of something.
Derived terms
* homeownership, home ownership
Anagrams
*
|