Abutted vs Butted - What's the difference?
abutted | butted |
(abut)
To touch by means of a mutual border, edge or end; to border on; to lie adjacent; to project; to terminate; to be contiguous; to meet, of an estate, country, etc.
To lean against on one end; to end on, of a part of a building or wall.
To border upon; be next to; abut on; be adjacent to; to support by an abutment.
(butt)
Having a butt or backside (of a specified kind).
As verbs the difference between abutted and butted
is that abutted is past tense of abut while butted is past tense of butt.As an adjective butted is
{{cx|US|slang|lang=en}} Having a butt or backside (of a specified kind).abutted
English
Verb
(head)abut
English
Alternative forms
* abuttVerb
(abutt)- It was a time when Germany still abutted upon Russia.
- His land abuts on the road.
Usage notes
* (estate or country) Followed by any of the following words: upon', '''on''' or (obsolete) ' to . * (building) Followed by any of the following words: upon', '''on''', or ' against .References
Anagrams
* * ----butted
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(-)- a big-butted woman
