different between gerant vs gyrant
gerant
English
Etymology
French gérant.
Noun
gerant (plural gerants)
- The manager or acting partner of a company, joint-stock association, etc.
Anagrams
- Garnet, Gretna, Tanger, argent, garnet
Latin
Verb
gerant
- third-person plural present active subjunctive of ger? "may they carry, may they bear; may they wear"
Romanian
Etymology
From French gérant.
Noun
gerant m (plural geran?i)
- manager
Declension
gerant From the web:
- what gerant mean
- what does grant mean in french
- gerand verb
- what does gerente mean in english
- what us gerant
- what does gerante
- what does a gerontologist do
gyrant
English
Adjective
gyrant (comparative more gyrant, superlative most gyrant)
- (poetic) gyrating
- 1844, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, A Drama of Exile
- To a dim whirl of languor and delight, / I wound in gyrant orbits smooth and white […]
- 1844, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, A Drama of Exile
Anagrams
- gantry
Latin
Verb
g?rant
- third-person plural present active indicative of g?r?
gyrant From the web:
- what does tyrant mean
- what does gyrant
- what does tyrant mean in english
- what do tyrant mean
- what is the meaning tyrant
- what does the term tyrant mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- gerant vs gyrant
- gerant vs grant
- edified vs encouraged
- edified vs deified
- edified vs edifies
- building vs edified
- terms vs deifier
- deifier vs reifier
- deifier vs defier
- deifier vs deified
- deifier vs deifies
- edifies vs deifies
- edifiest vs edifies
- edifiers vs edifies
- edifices vs edifies
- edificatory vs edificator
- edificator vs edify
- edificator vs edification
- edificator vs edifice
- edificatory vs edificators