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Youthly vs Mouthly - What's the difference?

youthly | mouthly |

As adjectives the difference between youthly and mouthly

is that youthly is (archaic) youthful while mouthly is of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the mouth or of mouths; oral.

youthly

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • (archaic) Youthful.
  • *1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , I.xi:
  • *:he hath left his plumes all hoary gray, / And deckt himselfe with feathers youthly gay [...].
  • mouthly

    English

    Adjective

    (en-adj)
  • Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the mouth or of mouths; oral.
  • *1708 , John Dunton, The phenix :
  • Wherefore if in very deed they eat the Substance of the Flesh and Blood of Christ, they are not far from the mouthly' eating of the Lutherans, [...] Which if any one deny, the whole Building of the Mass and Transubstantiation falls to the ground, together with the ' mouthly and real Eating of the Substance of the Flesh and Blood of Christ.
  • *1979 , Oral History Society (Great Britain), Oral history :
  • Gerhard Botz organised an exploratory half-day session on oral history (or more precisely, 'mouthly history') [...]