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saint vs Lawrence

Lawrence vs saint

saint and Lawrence both are nouns.

saint is a verb but Lawrence is not a verb.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
saint Yes No Yes No
Lawrence Yes No No No
saint (noun) Lawrence (noun)
person of exceptional holiness a town in northeastern Kansas on the Kansas River; scene of raids by John Brown in 1856
model of excellence or perfection of a kind; one having no equal English novelist and poet and essayist whose work condemned industrial society and explored sexual relationships (1885-1930)
a person who has died and has been declared a saint by canonization United States physicist who developed the cyclotron (1901-1958)
English actress (1898-1952)
English portrait painter remembered for the series of portraits of the leaders of the alliance against Napoleon (1769-1830)
Welsh soldier who from 1916 to 1918 organized the Arab revolt against the Turks; he later wrote an account of his adventures (1888-1935)
Roman martyr; supposedly Lawrence was ordered by the police to give up the church's treasure and when he responded by presenting the poor people of Rome he was roasted to death on a gridiron (died in 258)
saint (verb) Lawrence (verb)
declare (a dead person) to be a saint
hold sacred
Difference between saint and Lawrence

Words related to "saint"


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