The difference between Known and Strange
When used as nouns, known means a variable or constant whose value is already determined, whereas strange means vagina.
When used as adjectives, known means identified as a specific type, whereas strange means not normal.
Strange is also verb with the meaning: to alienate.
check bellow for the other definitions of Known and Strange
-
Known as an adjective:
Identified as a specific type; renowned, famous.
Examples:
"He was a known pickpocket."
-
Known as an adjective:
Researched, accepted, familiar.
-
Known as a noun (algebra):
A variable or constant whose value is already determined.
-
Known as a noun:
Any fact or situation which is known or familiar.
-
Known as a verb:
-
Strange as an adjective:
Not normal; odd, unusual, surprising, out of the ordinary.
Examples:
"He thought it strange that his girlfriend wore shorts in the winter."
-
Strange as an adjective:
Unfamiliar, not yet part of one's experience.
Examples:
"I moved to a strange town when I was ten."
-
Strange as an adjective (physics):
Having the quantum mechanical property of strangeness.
-
Strange as an adjective (obsolete):
Belonging to another country; foreign.
-
Strange as an adjective (obsolete):
Reserved; distant in deportment.
-
Strange as an adjective (obsolete):
Backward; slow.
-
Strange as an adjective (obsolete):
Not familiar; unaccustomed; inexperienced.
-
Strange as a verb (obsolete, transitive):
To alienate; to estrange.
-
Strange as a verb (obsolete, intransitive):
To be estranged or alienated.
-
Strange as a verb (obsolete, intransitive):
To wonder; to be astonished (at something).
-
Strange as a noun (slang, uncountable):
vagina