marcel |
marc |
As a proper noun marcel
is occasionally borrowed from french.
As a noun marc is
march.
jason |
marc |
As proper nouns the difference between jason and marc
is that
jason is the leader of the Argonauts, who retrieved the Golden Fleece from king Aeetes of Colchis, for his uncle Pelias while
Marc is a given name derived from Latin, a French variant of Mark.
As a noun marc is
the refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed.
marc |
teddy |
As nouns the difference between marc and teddy
is that
marc is the refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed while
teddy is abbreviation of lang=en.
As proper nouns the difference between marc and teddy
is that
marc is a given name derived from Latin, a French variant of Mark while
Teddy is a diminutive of the male given names Edward and Theodore.
marc |
alex |
As proper nouns the difference between marc and alex
is that
marc is a given name derived from Latin, a French variant of Mark while
Alex is a given name derived from Ancient Greek.
As a noun marc
is the refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed.
marc |
|
geoffroyscat |
marc |
mary |
marc |
As nouns the difference between mary and marc
is that
mary is (gay slang|chiefly|us) a male homosexual while
marc is march.
narc |
marc |
As nouns the difference between narc and marc
is that
narc is (slang) a narcotics squad police officer or
narc can be (slang) (
spy) while
marc is march.
As a verb narc
is (slang) or
narc can be (slang) to suffer from impaired judgment due to nitrogen narcosis (eg while scuba diving).
marc |
peter |
As nouns the difference between marc and peter
is that
marc is march while
peter is (
hypocoristic slang ) the penis.
As a verb peter is
(most often used in the phrase peter out) to dwindle; to trail off; to diminish to nothing.
mara |
marc |
As nouns the difference between mara and marc
is that
mara is a nightmare; a spectre or wraith-like creature in Germanic and particularly Scandinavian folklore; a female demon who torments people in sleep by crouching on their chests or stomachs, or by causing terrifying visions while
marc is the refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed.
As proper nouns the difference between mara and marc
is that
mara is {{given name|female|from=Hebrew} while
Marc is a given name derived from Latin, a French variant of Mark.
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