Bugle vs Protrude - What's the difference?
bugle | protrude |
A horn used by hunters.
(music) a simple brass instrument consisting of a horn with no valves, playing only pitches in its harmonic series
An often-cultivated plant in the family Lamiaceae.
Anything shaped like a bugle, round or conical and having a bell on one end.
To announce, sing, or cry in the manner of a musical bugle
a tubular glass or plastic bead sewn onto clothes as a decorative trim
* 1925 , , Random House, London:2007, p. 207.
To extend from, above or beyond a surface or boundary; to bulge outward; to stick out.
*
To thrust forward; to drive or force along.
To thrust out, as through a narrow orifice or from confinement; to cause to come forth.
* Thomson
As verbs the difference between bugle and protrude
is that bugle is while protrude is to extend from, above or beyond a surface or boundary; to bulge outward; to stick out.bugle
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl), from (etyl), from (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (shaped like a bugle) cone, funnelHypernyms
* musical instrumentDerived terms
* buglerCoordinate terms
* trumpetVerb
(bugl)Synonyms
* trumpetEtymology 2
.Noun
(en noun)- With the exception of a woman in a black silk dress with bugles who, incredible as it may seem, had ordered cocoa and sparkling limado simultaneously and was washing down a meal of Cambridge sausages and pastry with alternate draughts of both liquids, the place was empty.
Etymology 3
(etyl)Anagrams
* ----protrude
English
Verb
(protrud)- Archegonia are surrounded early in their development by the juvenile perianth, through the slender beak of which the elongated neck of the fertilized archegonium protrudes .
- (John Locke)
- When Spring protrudes the bursting gems.
