Carom vs Catom - What's the difference?
carom | catom |
(cue sports, especially billiards) A shot in which the ball struck with the cue comes in contact with two or more balls on the table; a hitting of two or more balls with the player's ball.
A billiard-like Indian game in which players take turns flicking checker-like pieces into one of four goals on the corners of (one meter by one meter square) board.
To make a carom (shot in billiards).
To strike and bounce back; to strike (something) and rebound.
* '>citation
* 1922 , John Reed, Ten Days that Shook the World :
As nouns the difference between carom and catom
is that carom is (cue sports|especially billiards) a shot in which the ball struck with the cue comes in contact with two or more balls on the table; a hitting of two or more balls with the player's ball while catom is a nanoscale robot, many of which would interact to form claytronic structures.As a verb carom
is to make a carom (shot in billiards).carom
English
Alternative forms
* carromNoun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (shot in which the cue ball strikes two balls) cannon (UK)Verb
(en verb)- Snow filled her mouth. She caromed off things she never saw, tumbling through a cluttered canyon like a steel marble falling through pins in a pachinko machine.
- [T]he grubit bombs went rolling back and forth over our feet, fetching up against the sides of the car with a crash. The big Red Guard, whose name was Vladimir Nicolaievitch, plied me with questions about America while we held on to each other and danced amid the caroming bombs.
