wikidiffcom |
gwatkin |
As a proper noun gwatkin is
a patronymic welsh and english surname; derived from watkin a pet name for the given name walter originally 'ap gwatkyn' or 'ap gwatkin', meaning 'son of watkin'.
taxonomy |
gwatkin |
As a noun taxonomy
is the science or the technique used to make a classification.
As a proper noun gwatkin is
a patronymic welsh and english surname; derived from watkin a pet name for the given name walter originally 'ap gwatkyn' or 'ap gwatkin', meaning 'son of watkin'.
watkin |
gwatkin |
As proper nouns the difference between watkin and gwatkin
is that
watkin is while
gwatkin is a patronymic welsh and english surname; derived from watkin a pet name for the given name walter originally 'ap gwatkyn' or 'ap gwatkin', meaning 'son of watkin'.
surname |
gwatkin |
As a noun surname
is (obsolete) an additional name, particularly those derived from a birthplace, quality, or achievement; an epithet.
As a verb surname
is to give a
surname .
As a proper noun gwatkin is
a patronymic welsh and english surname; derived from watkin a pet name for the given name walter originally 'ap gwatkyn' or 'ap gwatkin', meaning 'son of watkin'.
english |
gwatkin |
As a noun english
is (us) spinning or rotary motion given to a ball around the vertical axis, as in billiards or bowling.
As a proper noun gwatkin is
a patronymic welsh and english surname; derived from watkin a pet name for the given name walter originally 'ap gwatkyn' or 'ap gwatkin', meaning 'son of watkin'.
welsh |
gwatkin |
As proper nouns the difference between welsh and gwatkin
is that
welsh is the Welsh language while
Gwatkin is a patronymic Welsh and English surname; derived from Watkin a pet name for the given name Walter. Originally 'ap Gwatkyn' or 'ap Gwatkin', meaning 'son of Watkin'.
As an adjective Welsh
is (Native) British; pertaining to the Celtic peoples who inhabited much of Britain before the Roman occupation.
As a verb welsh
is to swindle someone by not paying a debt, especially a gambling debt.
patronymic |
gwatkin |
As an adjective patronymic
is derived from ancestors; as, a patronymic denomination.
As a noun patronymic
is name acquired from one's father's, grandfather's or earlier male ancestor's first name some cultures use a patronymic where other cultures use a surname or family name; other cultures (like russia) use both a patronymic and a surname.
As a proper noun gwatkin is
a patronymic welsh and english surname; derived from watkin a pet name for the given name walter originally 'ap gwatkyn' or 'ap gwatkin', meaning 'son of watkin'.