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gey

Tey vs Gey - What's the difference?

tey | gey |


As a noun tey

is an old english measure of length for rope, perhaps equivalent to the fathom.

As an adverb gey is

(scotland|ireland|northern england) very.

As an adjective gey is

(scotland|ireland|northern england) fairly good; considerable.

Gay vs Gey - What's the difference?

gay | gey |


As adjectives the difference between gay and gey

is that gay is happy, joyful, and lively while gey is fairly good; considerable.

As a proper noun Gay

is {{surname|A=An|English|from=nicknames}}, originally a nickname for a cheerful or lively person.

As a noun gay

is a homosexual, especially a male homosexual; see also lesbian.

As a verb gay

is to make happy or cheerful.

As an adverb gey is

very.

Gee vs Gey - What's the difference?

gee | gey |


As an interjection gee

is a general exclamation of surprise or frustration.

As a verb gee

is (often as imperative to a draft animal) to turn in a direction away from the driver, typically to the right.

As a noun gee

is a gee-gee; a horse or gee can be or gee can be (ireland|slang) (vagina), (vulva)[http://booksgooglecom/books?id=4yfseghljboc&pg=pa850&lpg=pa850&dq=gee+%22om+dalzell%22+%22terry+victor%22&source=bl&ots=7jrck2k_5c&sig=gvq1g1ffirwftymi7wgybhf0304&hl=en&sa=x&ei=tddat5pc5jsjatgoljml&ved=0ccaq6aewaa#v=onepage&q&f=false the new partridge dictionary of slang and unconventional english ] p 850, tom dalzell and terry victor routledge, 2006 isbn: 0-415-25937-1.

As an adverb gey is

(scotland|ireland|northern england) very.

As an adjective gey is

(scotland|ireland|northern england) fairly good; considerable.

Gry vs Gey - What's the difference?

gry | gey |


As a proper noun gry

is of modern usage from the vocabulary word gry "dawn".

As an adverb gey is

(scotland|ireland|northern england) very.

As an adjective gey is

(scotland|ireland|northern england) fairly good; considerable.

Gei vs Gey - What's the difference?

gei | gey |


As a noun gei

is a martial arts uniform.

As an adverb gey is

very.

As an adjective gey is

fairly good; considerable.

Gey vs Goy - What's the difference?

gey | goy |


As an adverb gey

is (scotland|ireland|northern england) very.

As an adjective gey

is (scotland|ireland|northern england) fairly good; considerable.

As a noun goy is

(goy).

Gey vs Bey - What's the difference?

gey | bey |


As an adverb gey

is very.

As an adjective gey

is fairly good; considerable.

As a noun bey is

a governor of a province or district in the Turkish dominions; also, in some places, a prince or nobleman; a beg.

Gey vs Wey - What's the difference?

gey | wey |


As an adverb gey

is very.

As an adjective gey

is fairly good; considerable.

As a noun wey is

an old English measure of weight containing 224 pounds; equivalent to 2 hundredweight.

As a proper noun Wey is

an English river which flows through Guildford, and is a tributary of the Thames.

Ley vs Gey - What's the difference?

ley | gey |


As adjectives the difference between ley and gey

is that ley is fallow; unseeded while gey is fairly good; considerable.

As a noun ley

is an alternative spelling of lang=en.

As an adverb gey is

very.

Gey vs Geo - What's the difference?

gey | geo |


As an adverb gey

is (scotland|ireland|northern england) very.

As an adjective gey

is (scotland|ireland|northern england) fairly good; considerable.

As a noun geo is

geography course or exam.

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