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wright

Oright vs Wright - What's the difference?

oright | wright |


As an interjection oright

is .

As a proper noun wright is

from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as cartwright.

Wright vs Fright - What's the difference?

wright | fright |


As nouns the difference between wright and fright

is that wright is a builder or creator of something while fright is a state of terror excited by the sudden appearance of danger; sudden and violent fear, usually of short duration; a sudden alarm.

As verbs the difference between wright and fright

is that wright is misspelling of lang=en while fright is to frighten.

As a proper noun Wright

is {{surname|British occupational|from=occupations}} from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as Cartwright.

Weight vs Wright - What's the difference?

weight | wright |


As a noun weight

is the force on an object due to the gravitational attraction between it and the earth (or whatever astronomical object it is primarily influenced by).

As a verb weight

is to add weight to something, in order to make it heavier.

As a proper noun wright is

from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as cartwright.

Bright vs Wright - What's the difference?

bright | wright |


As proper nouns the difference between bright and wright

is that bright is while wright is from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as cartwright.

Smith vs Wright - What's the difference?

smith | wright |


As nouns the difference between smith and wright

is that smith is a craftsperson who works metal into desired forms using a hammer and other tools, sometimes heating the metal to make it more workable, especially a blacksmith while wright is a builder or creator of something.

As verbs the difference between smith and wright

is that smith is to forge, to form, usually on an anvil; by heating and pounding while wright is misspelling of lang=en.

As proper nouns the difference between smith and wright

is that smith is {{surname|A=An English|from=occupations}} (the most common in Britain, the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand) while Wright is {{surname|British occupational|from=occupations}} from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as Cartwright.

Wright vs Giemsa - What's the difference?

wright | giemsa |


As a proper noun wright

is from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as cartwright.

As a noun giemsa is

(genetics) a complex of stains used to investigate chromosomes; a mixture of eosin and methylene azure in glycerol and methanol.

Wright vs Wrighty - What's the difference?

wright | wrighty |


As proper nouns the difference between wright and wrighty

is that wright is {{surname|British occupational|from=occupations}} from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as Cartwright while Wrighty is a nickname of the surname Wright.

As a noun wright

is a builder or creator of something.

As a verb wright

is misspelling of lang=en.

Wright vs Housewright - What's the difference?

wright | housewright | see also |

Housewright is a derived term of wright.



As nouns the difference between wright and housewright

is that wright is a builder or creator of something while housewright is a person who builds and repairs houses, especially wooden houses. Particularly, in eighteenth-century colonial America, a craftsman who cut timber (like a lumberjack) in the quantity required for the construction of a house, then sawed it into planks, and finally jointed and assembled them (like a carpenter).

As a verb wright

is misspelling of lang=en.

As a proper noun Wright

is {{surname|British occupational|from=occupations}} from a maker of machinery; found in many combinations such as Cartwright.

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