Bach vs Hutch - What's the difference?
bach | hutch | Related terms |
(New Zealand, northern) A holiday home, usually small and near the beach, often with only one or two rooms and of simple construction.
(US) To live apart from women, as with the period when a divorce is in progress (compare bachelor pad).
A cage in which a rabbit or rabbits are kept.
* 1960 , , chapter 16,
A piece of furniture in which items may be displayed.
A measure of two Winchester bushels.
(mining) The case of a flour bolt.
(mining) A car on low wheels, in which coal is drawn in the mine and hoisted out of the pit.
A jig for washing ore.
To hoard or lay up, in a chest.
* Milton
(mining) To wash (ore) in a box or jig.
Bach is a related term of hutch.
As a proper noun bach
is of english-speakers.As a noun hutch is
a cage in which a rabbit or rabbits are kept.As a verb hutch is
to hoard or lay up, in a chest.bach
English
Noun
(baches)Synonyms
* crib (New Zealand)Verb
(es)Anagrams
* ----hutch
English
Noun
(es)- To reach the courtroom, on the second floor, one passed sundry sunless county cubbyholes: the tax assessor,... the circuit clerk, the judge of probate lived in cool dim hutches that smelled
Verb
- She hutched the ore.