Arrowed vs Harrowed - What's the difference?
arrowed | harrowed |
(harrow)
A device consisting of a heavy framework having several disks or teeth in a row, which is dragged across ploughed land to smooth or break up the soil, to remove weeds or cover seeds; a harrow plow.
* 1918 , Louise & Aylmer Maude, trans. Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina , Oxford 1998, p. 153:
* {{quote-book
, year=1960
, author=
, title=(Jeeves in the Offing)
, section=chapter X
, passage=“It may be fun for her,” I said with one of my bitter laughs, “but it isn't so diverting for the unfortunate toads beneath the harrow whom she plunges so ruthlessly in the soup.”}}
* 1969 , Bessie Head, When Rain Clouds Gather , Heinemann 1995, p. 28:
(military) An obstacle formed by turning an ordinary harrow upside down, the frame being buried.
To drag a harrow over; to break up with a harrow.
* Bible, Job xxxix. 10
* 1719
To traumatize or disturb; to frighten or torment.
To break or tear, as with a harrow; to wound; to lacerate; to torment or distress; to vex.
* Rowe
* Shakespeare
(obsolete) A call for help, or of distress, alarm etc.
* 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , II.vi:
As verbs the difference between arrowed and harrowed
is that arrowed is past participle of arrow while harrowed is past tense of harrow.As an adjective arrowed
is equipped with arrows.harrowed
English
Verb
(head)harrow
English
Etymology 1
Either representing unattested (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- He sent for the carpenter, who was under contract to be with the threshing-machine, but it turned out that he was mending the harrows , which should have been mended the week before Lent.
- Part of your job would be to learn tractor ploughing and the use of planters, harrows , and cultivators.
See also
*Verb
(en verb)- Will he harrow the valleys after thee?
- When the corn was sown, I had no harrow, but was forced to go over it myself, and drag a great heavy bough of a tree over it, to scratch it, as it may be called, rather than rake or harrow it.
- The headless horseman harrowed Ichabod Crane as he tried to reach the bridge.
- my aged muscles harrowed up with whips
- I could a tale unfold, whose lightest word / Would harrow up thy soul.
Derived terms
* harrowing * Harrowing of HellEtymology 2
From (etyl) haro, harou, of uncertain origin.Interjection
(en interjection)- Harrow , the flames, which me consume (said hee) / Ne can be quencht, within my secret bowels bee.
