Bristle vs Upstare - What's the difference?
bristle | upstare |
A stiff or coarse hair.
The hair or straws that make up a brush, broom, or similar item.
To rise or stand erect, like bristles.
* Sir Walter Scott
To appear as if covered with bristles; to have standing, thick and erect, like bristles.
* Thackeray
* Macaulay
To be on one's guard or raise one's defenses; to react with fear, suspicion, or distance.
* Shakespeare
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-22, volume=407, issue=8841, page=70, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= To fix a bristle to.
To stare or stand erect or on end; be erect or conspicuous; bristle.
*1896 , Edward Dowden, The life of Percy Bysshe Shelley :
*1903 , Charles James Longman, Longman's magazine: Volume 42 :
*1927 , Collected poems of Alexander G. Steven
*1999 , Thomas W. Krise, Caribbeana :
As a proper noun bristle
is (slang|humorous) bristol, england (in imitation of the local dialect).As a verb upstare is
to stare or stand erect or on end; be erect or conspicuous; bristle.bristle
English
Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
*Verb
(bristl)- His hair did bristle upon his head.
- the hill of La Haye Sainte bristling with ten thousand bayonets
- ports bristling with thousands of masts
- Now for the bare-picked bone of majesty / Doth dogged war bristle his angry crest.
Engineers of a different kind, passage=Private-equity nabobs bristle at being dubbed mere financiers. Piling debt onto companies’ balance-sheets is only a small part of what leveraged buy-outs are about, they insist. Improving the workings of the businesses they take over is just as core to their calling, if not more so. Much of their pleading is public-relations bluster.}}
- to bristle a thread
Derived terms
* bristlingAnagrams
* *upstare
English
Verb
(upstar)- In the street or road he reluctantly wore a hat, but in fields or gardens his little round head had no other covering than his long, wild, ragged locks." These wild locks upstared more wildly when Shelley, having dipped his head, [...]
- Th' Blofielders wor a right upstaren' lot o' chaps, and we had several owd scores ter set off agin them, so all Ranner woted for savage camp and Blofield didn't gainsay us.
- I have no people living ; none, Thank God ! will mourn me there, / Dreaming in misery of one Whose clouded eyes upstare
- [...] aghast, upstared my Hair, I speechless stood!