The difference between Uncle and Uncle-in-law
When used as nouns, uncle means the brother or brother-in-law of one's parent, whereas uncle-in-law means the husband of one's uncle or aunt (parent's sibling).
Uncle is also interjection with the meaning: a cry used to indicate surrender.
Uncle is also verb with the meaning: to address somebody by the term uncle.
check bellow for the other definitions of Uncle and Uncle-in-law
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Uncle as a noun:
The brother or brother-in-law of one's parent.
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Uncle as a noun (euphemistic):
A companion to one's (usually unmarried) mother.
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Uncle as a noun (figuratively):
A source of advice, encouragement, or help.
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Uncle as a noun (British, informal, dated):
A pawnbroker.
Examples:
"rfquotek Thackeray"
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Uncle as a noun (especially in the, _, Southern US, parts of, _, UK, and, Asia):
a man of an older generation than oneself, especially a friend of one's parents, by means of fictive kin.
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Uncle as a noun (Southern US, slang, archaic):
An older male African-American person.
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Uncle as a verb (transitive, colloquial):
To address somebody by the term uncle.
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Uncle as a verb (intransitive, colloquial):
To act like, or as, an uncle.
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Uncle-in-law as a noun (nonstandard):
The husband of one's uncle or aunt (parent's sibling).
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Uncle-in-law as a noun (nonstandard):
The uncle of one's spouse. The uncle of one's husband. The uncle of one's wife.