No
the same thing.
They are the same thing they mean before Christ.
niece, nephew, or relative?
they live in the same palace as the pharaoh or near
A castle was a fort, and a manor house was the home of the lord of an estate. They were not the same thing; though a manor house could be fortified, and if it were looked very like a castle; and a castle could be used by the lord of an estate as his home. A castle usually had a curtain wall and a ward or courtyard, and a fortified manor usually did not, and that might distinguish a castle used as a home from a fortified manor house. Oh heck, the difference depended on what the lord called it.
YES THERE IS CASTLE DEFENSE 2 IF YOU;R ASKING IT IS CALLED FAST CASTLE DEFENSE AND ITS THE SAME THING ONLY NOT ON coolmath4kids.com
sand or the same things as house (brick,plastic,and wood)
well no not really your village HQ can look like a castle if you level up alot but its the same thing just different look so no you cant get a castle
no.
It was made as a tourist attraction. You could ask the same thing about Cinderlla's Castle.
The house for dog is the same thing as a dog house. It is the home of your favorite pet.
The blood sucking thing is well established. The climbing wall thing comes from a couple of instances where Count Dracula went down and back up on the walls of his castle. It must be noted that the castle was very old and the mortar had eroded out from amongst the stones in the wall making it easily scalable. Johnathan Harker did exactly the same thing to escape from the same castle and he did it with his pockets full of gold --- so it couldn't have been a terribly difficult thing to do.
Castles and palaces are not the same thing, A castle is built as a fortified structure to withstand enemy attacks. A palace is built as a place of luxury.
At the same house where later Downton Abbey was filmed. Is it called Highclere Castle in Hampshire, England.
no they are synonyms since they mean the same thing basically
The homonym for gate is "gate". Homonyms are words that are spelled and pronounced the same, but have different meanings.