The difference between Easy and Eath
When used as adverbs, easy means in a relaxed or casual manner, whereas eath means easily.
When used as adjectives, easy means comfortable, whereas eath means easy.
Easy is also noun with the meaning: something that is easy.
check bellow for the other definitions of Easy and Eath
-
Easy as an adjective (now, rare, _, except in certain expressions):
Comfortable; at ease.
Examples:
"Now that I know it's taken care of, I can rest easy at night."
-
Easy as an adjective:
Requiring little skill or effort.
Examples:
"It's often easy to wake up but hard to get up."
"The teacher gave an easy test to her students."
-
Easy as an adjective:
Causing ease; giving comfort, or freedom from care or labour.
Examples:
"Rich people live in easy circumstances."
"an easy chair"
-
Easy as an adjective:
Free from constraint, harshness, or formality; unconstrained; smooth.
Examples:
"easy manners; an easy style"
-
Easy as an adjective (informal, pejorative, of a person):
Consenting readily to sex.
Examples:
"He has a reputation for being easy; they say he slept with half the senior class."
-
Easy as an adjective:
Not making resistance or showing unwillingness; tractable; yielding; compliant.
-
Easy as an adjective (finance, dated):
Not straitened as to money matters; opposed to .
Examples:
"The market is easy."
-
Easy as an adverb:
In a relaxed or casual manner.
Examples:
"After his illness, John decided to [[take it easy take it easy]]."
-
Easy as an adverb:
In a manner without strictness or harshness.
Examples:
"Jane went easier on him after he broke his arm."
-
Easy as an adverb:
Used an intensifier for large magnitudes.
Examples:
"This project will cost 15 million dollars, easy."
-
Easy as an adverb:
Not difficult, not hard.
-
Easy as a noun:
Something that is easy
-
Easy as a verb (rowing):
-
Eath as an adjective (Now, _, chiefly, _, dialectal):
Easy; not hard or difficult.
-
Eath as an adverb (Now, _, chiefly, _, dialectal):
Easily.