What's the difference between beloved and leman?

Beloved


Definition:

  • (imp. & p. p.) of Belove
  • (p. p. & a.) Greatly loved; dear to the heart.
  • (n.) One greatly loved.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) When Hayley Cropper swallows poison on Coronation Street on Monday night, taking her own life to escape inoperable pancreatic cancer, with her beloved husband, Roy, in pieces at her bedside, it will be the end of a character who, thanks to Hesmondhalgh's performance, has captivated and challenged British TV viewers for 16 years.
  • (2) Was he being put forward as the foremost literary novelist of his generation, one whose best-known work stands comparison with The Naked and the Dead , Gravity's Rainbow , American Pastoral , Beloved and Underworld ?
  • (3) In La Shish, the beloved local halal restaurant where Wanda Beydoun has worked a minimum wage managing job for 16 years, these stereotypes are a source of amusement.
  • (4) The social network remains a niche product, beloved by journalists, celebrities, and a hard core of miscellaneous obsessive users — but few others.
  • (5) Her maiden speech in parliament celebrated the diversity of her beloved Yorkshire constituency, and passionately made the case that there is more that unites us than divides us.
  • (6) He has set up a "trade and growth" board for Scotland and will soon lead Scotland's "largest ever trade delegation to Brazil", a visit which will take place on St Andrew's Day, the patron saints day beloved by the nationalists.
  • (7) Two years later, he left his beloved Glasgow to represent Aberdeen South at Westminster.
  • (8) If there is a patron saint of shorts in this country, then it is undoubtedly the Chungmeister, with her beloved denim hotpants and collection of lacy and smart city shorts.
  • (9) Shelley Gilbert was a beloved baby, born to older parents who thought they couldn't have children.
  • (10) This is a party on its way to becoming a multinational libertarian sect, whose preoccupations are no longer those either of much of its electorate or of the business community – wrestling with how genuinely to innovate, invest and motivate workforces in a world of increasingly amoral, ownerless companies so beloved and promoted by the sect.
  • (11) Even the most hardcore fans are sceptical when the beloved franchise name is used.
  • (12) His Star Trek reboots are dispiriting: the quirky and beloved sci-fi franchise pureed into stimulating but unremarkable blockbuster entertainment, distinguished mainly by caricatures of iconic characters that are more branding than interpretation.
  • (13) Brown's beloved dog, Charlie, had fallen ill. "Brown told me that his dog was ill, had terrible tics and could hardly see.
  • (14) Confessions of a location scout: why the New York beloved of the movies doesn't exist any more Read more Meanwhile, those apartment and condo owners who are full-time residents routinely join landlords in jacking up commercial rents, driving out beloved small businesses and neighbourhood eateries, and reducing the cityscape to a monoculture of faceless chain stores, nail salons, bank branches and overpriced restaurants.
  • (15) To really be beloved in France he needs to learn to swear with the virtuosity of a Frenchman who's mislaid his linen Agnes B scarf in the Rue du Bac.
  • (16) Gove is an educated man and would surely acknowledge that the repurposing of art to reinforce notions of cultural identity is something beloved of, and practised by, political regimes on both the far left and far right.
  • (17) Still, as the crisp white stuff beloved of children turns into freezing grey slush, it's worth another laugh at the old British Rail " wrong type of snow " excuse.
  • (18) I recounted the events leading to his last days: with a heavy heart but scientific resolve the great polar researcher left his beloved home in the spring of 1930 to lead a gruelling, unprecedented scientific expedition into Greenland.
  • (19) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Shortly afterwards, Mark persuaded his beloved older brother to come and join him.
  • (20) His private palace, seven miles outside town in Kawele, brimmed with paintings, sculptures, stained glass, ersatz Louis XIV furniture, marble from Carrara in Italy and two swimming pools surrounded by loudspeakers playing his beloved Gregorian chants or classical music.

Leman


Definition:

  • (n.) A sweetheart, of either sex; a gallant, or a mistress; -- usually in a bad sense.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Zooplankton was collected monthly from Leman Lake, from November 1976 to April 1977.
  • (2) They give a typical adolescent process [of rebellion] an Islamic dimension,” Leman said.
  • (3) When locals expressed concern, officials told them the cleric was “marginal”, Johan Leman, a veteran anti-racism activist who works in Molenbeek, the Brussels neighbourhood where many of the Paris attackers came from and where Salah Abdeslam was arrested last week, said in November.
  • (4) It’s not that simple | Johan Leman Read more “Its all this new technology.
  • (5) "The kinds of things people are calling 'innovative' about these schools – different term times, longer school days, a wider range of subjects – much of it is possible for local authority schools, and certainly all of it for academies," says Jeremy Rowe, head of Sir John Leman high school in Beccles, Suffolk.
  • (6) Leman, the activist who also works there, said recruiters often told teenagers their parents do not know “true Islam”.
  • (7) Jeremy Rowe, the headteacher at Sir John Leman, which recently converted to an academy, was quoted as saying the proposed free school would be a disaster and a waste of money.
  • (8) Self-blame is one of the downsides of being an only child, according to Dr Kevin Leman, author of The Birth Order Book: Why You Are the Way You Are , who writes about "the discouraged perfectionist".
  • (9) The Beccles free school in Suffolk, due to open this September, is expected to cost the neighbouring Sir John Leman high school £1m, or 15% of the budget.

Words possibly related to "leman"