Bogie vs Cabinet - What's the difference?
bogie | cabinet |
(rail, British, Australia, New Zealand, Canada) Structure with axles and wheels under a railway carriage or locomotive, called railroad truck in US English. Also used under semitrailers, and lorries with more than one rear axle.
(Indian English) Railway carriage
.
(military) An aircraft of unknown friend/foe status. (compare bandit)
(golf) A score one stroke higher than par on any one hole.
(music) A toy similar to a violin bow, consisting of a wooden stick with notches along one or more sides or edges to produce a rattly noise when kratzed (stroked) against a hard edge, lip of container etc.
A piece of solid or semisolid mucus in or removed from the nostril.
(Ulster Scots) .
A storage closet either separate from, or built into, a wall.
(New England) cupboard
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham)
, title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=3 (historical) A size of photograph, specifically one measuring 3?" by 5½".
* 1891 , , A Scandal In Bohemia , Norton (2005), p. 19,
A group of advisors to a government or business entity.
(politics, often, capitalized) In parliamentary and some other systems of government, the group of ministers responsible for creating government policy and for overseeing the departments comprising the executive branch.
(archaic) A small chamber or private room.
* Prescott
(often capitalized) A collection of art or ethnographic objects.
(dialectal, Rhode Island) Milkshake.
(obsolete) A hut; a cottage; a small house.
* Spenser
As nouns the difference between bogie and cabinet
is that bogie is (rail|british|australia|new zealand|canada) structure with axles and wheels under a railway carriage or locomotive, called railroad truck in us english also used under semitrailers, and lorries with more than one rear axle while cabinet is a storage closet either separate from, or built into, a wall.bogie
English
Alternative forms
* bogey * bogyNoun
(en noun)cabinet
English
Noun
(en noun)citation, passage=‘[…] There's every Staffordshire crime-piece ever made in this cabinet , and that's unique. The Van Hoyer Museum in New York hasn't that very rare second version of Maria Marten's Red Barn over there, nor the little Frederick George Manning—he was the criminal Dickens saw hanged on the roof of the gaol in Horsemonger Lane, by the way—’}}
- Holmes took a note of it. “One other question,” said he. “Was the photograph a cabinet ?”
- Philip passed some hours every day in his father's cabinet.
- Hearken a while from thy green cabinet , / The rural song of careful Colinet.