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Aspire vs Aspirate - What's the difference?

aspire | aspirate |

As verbs the difference between aspire and aspirate

is that aspire is to hope or dream; especially to hope or work towards a profession or occupation (followed by to as a preposition or infinitive particle) while aspirate is to remove a liquid or gas by means of suction.

As a noun aspirate is

the puff of air accompanying the release of a plosive consonant.

As an adjective aspirate is

aspirated.

aspire

English

Verb

  • To hope or dream; especially to hope or work towards a profession or occupation (followed by to as a preposition or infinitive particle ).
  • He aspires to become a successful doctor.
  • * Alexander Pope
  • Aspiring to be angels, men rebel.
  • (obsolete) To aspire to; to long for; to try to reach; to mount to.
  • * Shakespeare
  • That gallant spirit hath aspired the clouds.
  • To rise; to ascend; to tower; to soar.
  • * Waller
  • My own breath still foments the fire, / Which flames as high as fancy can aspire .

    Anagrams

    * * * * ----

    aspirate

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (linguistics) The puff of air accompanying the release of a plosive consonant.
  • (linguistics) A sound produced by such a puff of air.
  • * 1972 , Leonard R. Palmer, Descriptive and Comparative Linguistics , page 50
  • We now come to the so-called aspirate [h], which must be also classified as a fricative consonant.
  • A mark of aspiration (#) used in Greek; the asper, or rough breathing.
  • (Bentley)

    Verb

    (aspirat)
  • To remove a liquid or gas by means of suction.
  • * 2003 , Miep H. Helfrich et al.'' (eds.), ''Bone Research Protocols , page 430
  • Scrape cells using a cell scraper and aspirate the resulting slurry into a 2.0-mL Eppendorf tube.
  • To inhale so as to draw something other than air into one's lungs.
  • (linguistics) To produce an audible puff of breath. especially following a consonant.
  • * 1887 , James Frederick Hodgetts, Greater England , page 33
  • There is no doubt that the uncertainty about the letter H, which much defaces English in some classes of the community, is due entirely to Norman influence, for Frenchmen could not aspirate . Three words—hour, honor, heir, with compounds of them such as hourly, honourable, heirship, and the like, are quite enough to puzzle people who find H sometimes sounded, sometimes not.

    Synonyms

    * (inhale) breathe in, inhale, inspire

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • aspirated
  • Anagrams

    * ----