Beside vs Abut - What's the difference?
beside | abut |
Next to; at the side of.
Not relevant to.
Besides; in addition to.
* Alexander Pope:
otherwise; else
* Percy Bysshe Shelley, Ozymandias :
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.
As a preposition beside
is next to; at the side of.As an adverb beside
is otherwise; else.As a verb abut is
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 .beside
English
Preposition
(English prepositions)- A small table beside the bed
- That is beside the point
- To all beside , as much an empty shade, / An Eugene living, as a Caesar dead.
Usage notes
* Not to be confused with besides . See .Derived terms
* besidely * beside oneself * beside the point * besidesAdverb
(-)- Nothing beside remains. Round the decay / Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare / The lone and level sands stretch far away.
See also
* para-Statistics
*Anagrams
*abut
English
Alternative forms
* abuttVerb
(abutt)- It was a time when Germany still abutted upon Russia.
- His land abuts on the road.
