What's the difference between bowne and bowse?

Bowne


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To make ready; to prepare; to dress.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Bown's email prompted an angry response from a number of MEPs, insiders said.
  • (2) Ukip said: "Alan Bown is an extremely generous donor to Ukip and is one of 16 members of the party's NEC.
  • (3) Another leaked email shows that the party's immigration spokesman, Gerard Batten, warned Ukip officials that he and other MEPs could face jail if they carried out Bown's demands.
  • (4) Photograph: Jane Bown Le Carré, however, said that "where Bingham believed that uncritical love of the intelligence services was synonymous with love of country, I came to believe that such love should be examined.
  • (5) Updated at 11.44pm GMT 11.29pm GMT Paul Bownes (@Sedona_Red) Is the brother of @ lengeldavid doing the signing of the anthem at the Super Bowl?!
  • (6) Two energy states for *CO are observed by FT-IR, which are altered in frequency by 94% and 88% of the difference from the ground-state heme CO toward free CO gas [Alben, J. O., Beece, D., Bowne, S. F., Doster, W., Eisenstein, L. Frauenfelder, H., Good, D., McDonald, J. D., Marden, M. C., Moh, P. P., Reinisch, L., Reynolds, A. H., Shyamsundar, E., & Yue, K. T. (1982) Proc.
  • (7) Jane Bown remembers the challenges of photographing them: "One child screamed and screamed and screamed.
  • (8) But Bown says his polling challenges the findings of polling by Lord Ashcroft, the former Conservative deputy chairman, suggesting Ukip is weakening Tory chances of an overall majority, and is only likely to put Ed Miliband into Number 10.
  • (9) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Cilla Black by Jane Bown This was the era of the boom in beat music on Merseyside, and Cilla regularly attended clubs such as the Cavern and the Iron Door.
  • (10) Jane Bown Jane Bown’s shot of Marc Chagall In 1967 I was living in Sevenoaks, Kent, when I somehow found out that Marc Chagall was going to be visiting Tudeley, which was close by.
  • (11) Photograph: Jane Bown for the Observer After Sting has showered and changed into a T-shirt and combats that look exactly the same as the ones he was wearing before, we walk to a nearby café and sit on the open terrace, facing each other across a wooden picnic table.
  • (12) JS 27 March 1966: Bridget Riley poses with one of her influential works Bridget Riley Photograph: Jane Bown for the Observer Jane Bown's portrait of Bridget Riley, taken for a piece entitled The New Isms of Art, is one of the numerous black-and-white portraits for which the photographer is celebrated.
  • (13) The polling was commissioned by Ukip donor Alan Bown and is one of a series to look at how Ukip is faring in key marginals.
  • (14) Two weeks after the email exchange, some MEPs met Bown, Farage and Stuart Wheeler at the Farmers Club in Whitehall, where they were informed that they were each under pressure to increase contributions to the party.
  • (15) Bown's proposals prompted a furious response from the party's MEPs, who feared they would be at risk of breaking the law if they diverted funds.
  • (16) But polling conducted for Alan Bown, the Ukip donor, suggests Ukip voters are not just ex-Tories, and many of those who have defected from the Conservatives will never return.
  • (17) Photograph: Jane Bown for the Observer In a world of nods and winks across Whitehall and St James’s, the line between the fourth estate and the defence of the realm was indistinct.
  • (18) Dr Stephanie Bown of the society said: "Historically, patients have had confidence in their GP to look after their sensitive information.
  • (19) Divided into four sections – "Leisure", "The Arts", "Our Changing Society" and "The World at Large" – the dummy featured photographs by Campbell as well as Jane Bown, Gerry Cranham and Robert Freeman.
  • (20) 1+9+8+2 (1982) was their fourth and final chart-topping album, and saw Pete Kircher listed as the new drummer and Andy Bown, already a regular Quo sideman, billed as keyboard player.

Bowse


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To carouse; to bouse; to booze.
  • (v. i.) To pull or haul; as, to bowse upon a tack; to bowse away, i. e., to pull all together.
  • (n.) A carouse; a drinking bout; a booze.

Example Sentences:

Words possibly related to "bowne"

Words possibly related to "bowse"