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Washburn vs Esquire: now it's up to you to decide which one is the best Guitar manufacturer!

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Washburn

Killed 21 times

vs

Esquire

Killed 14 times


Watch videos about Washburn
See pictures of Washburn
Read news about Washburn
Search Wikipedia for Washburn
Find lists containing Washburn


Watch videos about Esquire
See pictures of Esquire
Read news about Esquire
Search Wikipedia for Esquire
Find lists containing Esquire

3
Burn!
 
3
Shoot!
 
3
Hang!
 
3
Drown!
 
3
Explode!
 
3
Behead!
 
3
Poison!

 

2
Burn!
 
2
Shoot!
 
2
Hang!
 
2
Drown!
 
2
Explode!
 
2
Behead!
 
2
Poison!

From Wikipedia:

     Washburn (alternatively Washbourne, Washburne, Washborn, DeWashborne, etc.) is an uncommon surname of English origins. The family can be traced back to the lands in Worcestershire and Gloucestershire, England called "Little Washbourne" and "Great Washbourne". The name comes from the Saxon for "from the flooding brook," with "wash" meaning "swift moving current of a stream," and "burn" referring to a brook or a small stream. It may originate from the River Isbourne, which flowed near Little and Great Washbourne, or it may have also originated from Waseborn in Devonshire. The first known Washburn was Sir Roger Washbourne who lived in the 11th century. John Washburn, a descendant sailed to the Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts in the 17th century. According to the 1990 U.S. Census, there were 17,409 Washburns in the United States making it the 1,763rd most common name in the U.S. There are also a number of Washburns in Canada, many of whom are descendants of United Empire Loyalists (Ebenezer Washburn was as loyalist).
     ***
     Esquire (abbreviated Esq.) is a term of British origin, originally used to denote social status. Ultimately deriving from the medieval squires who assisted knights, the term came to be used automatically by men of gentle birth. The social rank of Esquire is that above gentleman. More specifically, though, a distinction was made between men of the upper and lower gentry, who were "esquires" and "gentlemen" respectively (between, for example, "Thomas Smith, Esq." and "William Jones, Gent."). A late example of this distinction is in the list of subscribers to The History of Elton, by the Rev. Rose Fuller Whistler, published in 1882, which clearly distinguishes between subscribers designated "Mr." (another way of indicating gentlemen) and those allowed "Esquire."


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