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Weast vs Jeast - What's the difference?

weast | jeast |

As nouns the difference between weast and jeast

is that weast is while jeast is (archaic) jest.

weast

English

Weast

Noun

(en noun) The point at which you have gone so far east that you are now west.
  • (substub)
  • Weast is the point at which you've gone so far east or west that you have, in turn, found that you have gone completely around and are now in the matrix. This point at which you have gone so far west or east that you are now east or west, this is Weast... Weast, like the other directional nouns, can be used as an adjective using the same rules that are used for other nouns.?

    jeast

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (archaic) jest
  • *{{quote-book, year=1927, author=William Allan Nielson, title=The Facts About Shakespeare, chapter=, edition= citation
  • , passage=Plume adds, "Sir John Mennes saw once his old father in his shop--a merry cheeked old man that said, 'Will was a good honest fellow, but he darest have crackt a jeast with him at any time.'" }}
  • *{{quote-book, year=1885, author=T. H., title=The History of Sir Richard Whittington, chapter=, edition= citation
  • , passage=And after, at a feast, Which he the king did make, He burnt the bonds all in jeast , And would no money take. }}