Difference between Dickens and Dickens

What is the difference between Dickens and Dickens?

Dickens as a noun is an exclamation of anger or confusion while Dickens as a noun is derived from dick ( richard ).

Dickens

Part of speech: noun

Definition: An exclamation of anger or confusion The devil

Dickens

Part of speech: proper noun

Definition: derived from Dick ( Richard ).Charles Dickens, English novelist.

Example sentence: I was a complete and typical only child. I was bookish, and sport was out of the question anyway. I had read all of Dickens and most of the volumes of Arthur Mee's Children's Encyclopedia by the time I was 11. The only time I was popular at school was the day I won the debating competition for my house.

We hope you now know whether to use Dickens or Dickens in your sentence.

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