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Enter two words to compare and contrast their definitions, origins, and synonyms to better understand how those words are related.

harry

Alohomora vs Harry - What's the difference?

alohomora | harry |


As a proper noun harry is

, also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

Muggle vs Harry - What's the difference?

muggle | harry |


As a noun muggle

is a non-magical person.

As a proper noun harry is

, also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

Born vs Harry - What's the difference?

born | harry |


As a noun born

is .

As a proper noun harry is

, also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

Nerd vs Harry - What's the difference?

nerd | harry |


As a noun nerd

is nerd (a person, often very studious, with poor social skills).

As a proper noun harry is

, also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

Harrison vs Harry - What's the difference?

harrison | harry |


As proper nouns the difference between harrison and harry

is that harrison is while harry is , also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

Harry vs Gary - What's the difference?

harry | gary |


As proper nouns the difference between harry and gary

is that harry is , also used as a pet form of henry and harold while gary is .

Harry vs Hatty - What's the difference?

harry | hatty |


As a proper noun harry

is , also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

As an adjective hatty is

of, relating to, or resembling, a hat.

Harry vs Hammy - What's the difference?

harry | hammy |


As a proper noun harry

is , also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

As an adjective hammy is

resembling ham.

As a noun hammy is

(us|australia|nz|chiefly|sports|slang) a hamstring injury.

Maraud vs Harry - What's the difference?

maraud | harry |


As a verb maraud

is to move about in roving fashion looking for plunder.

As a proper noun harry is

, also used as a pet form of henry and harold.

Harry vs Ben - What's the difference?

harry | ben |


As proper nouns the difference between harry and ben

is that harry is a given name derived from Germanic, also used as a pet form of Henry and Harold while Ben is a diminutive of the male given name Benjamin or, less often, of Benedict.

As a verb harry

is to bother; to trouble.

As a noun ben is

a prayer; a petition.

As a preposition ben is

in, into.

As an adjective ben is

inner, interior.

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