WordCmp.com

aroid vs lords-and-ladies

lords-and-ladies vs aroid

aroid and lords-and-ladies both are nouns.

aroid is an adjective but lords-and-ladies is not an adjective.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
aroid Yes Yes No No
lords-and-ladies Yes No No No
As nouns, lords-and-ladies is a hyponym of aroid; that is, lords-and-ladies is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than aroid:
  • aroid: any plant of the family Araceae; have small flowers massed on a spadix surrounded by a large spathe
  • lords-and-ladies: common European arum with lanceolate spathe and short purple spadix; emerges in early spring; source of a starch called arum
aroid (noun) lords-and-ladies (noun)
any plant of the family Araceae; have small flowers massed on a spadix surrounded by a large spathe common European arum with lanceolate spathe and short purple spadix; emerges in early spring; source of a starch called arum
aroid (adjective) lords-and-ladies (adjective)
relating to a plant of the family Araceae
Difference between aroid and lords-and-ladies

© WordCmp.com 2024, CC-BY 4.0 / CC-BY-SA 3.0.