What's the difference between woke and wove?

Woke


Definition:

  • () of Wake
  • (imp. & p. p.) Wake.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) When Fox woke up one morning in 1990 and noticed his little finger shaking, he thought it was a side effect of a hangover.
  • (2) I woke up yesterday morning with an inbox, in full capacity of love and compassion,” she wrote.
  • (3) The pair woke up early and gathered their birth certificates, social security cards and passports before making the roughly three-hour commute.
  • (4) This surely represents a new chapter in the European debt crisis, and it could be headlined The Day The Eurozone Finally Woke Up.
  • (5) Speaking through an interpreter, she said: We woke up from the screams.
  • (6) After seeing the film, I woke up thinking, I’m just like Daniel.
  • (7) Dunham, who was on holiday with her parents in Sweden, woke up to 50,000 emails linking to the discussion on the site, where a lively debate was taking place about the size of her thighs and just how shit she was.
  • (8) Hagere Selam remains a modest place of mudwalled shops with corrugated roofs, cows, donkeys and sheep wandering unpaved streets and children idling away an afternoon at table football – a generation with no memory of the famine that killed hundreds of thousands and woke up the world.
  • (9) Immediately after the verdicts two Surrey-based charities, Shooting Star Chase and the Woking & Sam Beare Hospices, said that Clifford would no longer be their patron.
  • (10) Judith woke to see David standing at the far right-hand corner of the bed, his light turned on.
  • (11) At about 10.15pm, he woke and saw Michael hanging from the top rail of the double bunk.
  • (12) I don't think much of what I'm wearing I had a long day at work yesterday so put whatever was around when I woke up!
  • (13) It woke people up who might have been sleeping," he said.
  • (14) Sometimes I woke up screaming at night, covered in sweat.” As a Dalit, she always faced humiliation.
  • (15) Some woke up long before dawn to travel hundreds of miles to be here in an estimated 2,000 buses and 28 trains.
  • (16) Woking also built a series of combined heat and power (CHP) stations - one of which powers council buildings, some sheltered housing and the bulk of the town centre, including the civic offices, a leisure complex, a hotel, bingo hall and exhibition centre.
  • (17) Then, one day, I woke up and heard the sad news that she had died.
  • (18) I woke up lying on my back in the emergency room, looking up at the faces of the doctors and nurses surrounding me.
  • (19) I had cooked, sometimes, with difficulty, yet woke one day to find I had somehow assembled a bizarre array of crockery on my floor, like a gnomes' tea party but with much scurf; I daily grew too fatigued to lift things and spent increasing hours abed.
  • (20) It’s as though you went out one warm evening – an evening fizzing with delicious potential – you went out for just one drink… and woke up two days later in a skip.

Wove


Definition:

  • (imp.) of Weave
  • () of Weave
  • () p. pr. & rare vb. n. of Weave.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) That helped cement the power of the money men in Westminster, with Sir Fred Goodwin's knighthood being just the most egregious example of government believing the mystique the financial sector wove around itself.
  • (2) A new report that provides the most comprehensive look yet at Cho also shows how his parents, teachers and mental health counsellors wove a safety net that held him together through most of high school.
  • (3) Officials, a commissioner, divisional court judges and – ultimately – the attorney general wove a web of secrecy around the correspondence.
  • (4) According to AFP, a weatherman on Russian state television wove comments on Ukraine's political crisis into his weather forecast, warning of a "wind of change" in the country's east.
  • (5) It was a very clever and accomplished piece of writing that wove everything together.
  • (6) Nora Shourd and Cindy Hickey said Bauer proposed to Shourd using an improvised ring he wove together with threads from his shirt.
  • (7) She wove a web of reasons to support her argument, while conceding that the Brulotte decision might be a “wrong decision” that the court would have to stick to for the foreseeable future.
  • (8) The speaker is Richard Cross, home secretary in Benjamin Disraeli’s government of the 1870s, the man who wove the strands of health and housing reform, slowly spun in the preceding decades, into law.
  • (9) The taskforce carefully wove these submissions into a final draft that has been endorsed by the leadership bodies of both organisations.
  • (10) The letters came from veterans, teenagers and aspiring novelists, on everything from torn-out notebook pages and Smythson cream wove to Hello Kitty stationery.
  • (11) It was essential to marry pictures and words to tell a complete story – the book interweaves drawings, paintings, documents and ephemera with many first-hand accounts of life in Terezín; I wove the narrative in and around the pictures.
  • (12) In the village of Guvecci in the deep south, minivans were shuttling along a bitumen road between the countries, disgorging dozens of men, women and children who then made their way along dirt roads that wove between olive groves.

Words possibly related to "woke"

Words possibly related to "wove"