Prore vs Frore - What's the difference?
prore | frore |
(poetic, obsolete) The prow or fore part of a ship.
* Alexander Pope
(archaic) Extremely cold; frozen.
* 1818 , (Percy Shelley), The Revolt of Islam , canto 9:
* 1883 , Religion in Europe, historically considered , page 13:
* 1896 , , (A Shropshire Lad) , XLVI, lines 15-16
* , (Rupert Brooke), Song
(archaic, rare) (freeze)
* , (Mary Howitt), The Sea :
As a noun prore
is the prow or fore part of a ship.As an adjective frore is
extremely cold; frozen.As a verb frore is
simple past of freeze.prore
English
Noun
(en noun)- Galleys with vermilion prores .
frore
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- We die, even as the winds of Autumn fade,
- Expiring in the frore and foggy air.
- For heavenly beauty, mid perennial springs, Feels not the change, which frore sad winter brings.
- Or if one haulm whose year is o'er / Shivers on the upland frore .
- My heart all Winter lay so numb / The earth so dead and frore .
Verb
(head)- And down below all fretted and frore ,