Chide vs Chine - What's the difference?
chide | chine |
To admonish in blame; to reproach angrily.
(obsolete) To utter words of disapprobation and displeasure; to find fault; to contend angrily.
(ambitransitive) To make a clamorous noise; to chafe.
* Shakespeare
* Shakespeare
The top of a ridge.
The spine of an animal.
* Dryden
* 1883:
A piece of the backbone of an animal, with the adjoining parts, cut for cooking.
(nautical) a sharp angle in the cross section of a hull
The edge or rim of a cask, etc., formed by the projecting ends of the staves; the chamfered end of a stave.
To cut through the backbone of; to cut into chine pieces.
To chamfer the ends of a stave and form the chine.
(Webster 1913)
(Southern England) a steep-sided ravine leading from the top of a cliff down to the sea
* J. Ingelow
* 1988, , Penguin Books (1988), page 169
In transitive terms the difference between chide and chine
is that chide is to admonish in blame; to reproach angrily while chine is to cut through the backbone of; to cut into chine pieces.As a noun chine is
the top of a ridge.chide
English
Verb
- 1591' ''And yet I was last '''chidden for being too slow.'' — Shakespeare, ''The Two Gentlemen of Verona , .
- 1598' ''If the scorn of your bright eyne / Have power to raise such love in mine, / Alack, in me what strange effect / Would they work in mild aspect? / Whiles you '''chid me, I did love'' — Shakespeare, ''As You Like It , .
- {{quote-book
citation, genre= , publisher=The Gutenberg Project , isbn= , page= , passage=Then she had not chidden' him for the use of that familiar salutation, nor did she ' chide him now, though she was promised to another. }}
- 1611' ''And Jacob was wroth, and '''chode with Laban: and Jacob answered and said to Laban, What is my trespass? what is my sin, that thou hast so hotly pursued after me? — Genesis 31:36 KJV.
- As doth a rock against the chiding flood.
- the sea that chides the banks of England
Synonyms
* See alsoAnagrams
* English irregular verbschine
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) chyne, from (etyl) eschine.Noun
(wikipedia chine) (en noun)- And chine with rising bristles roughly spread.
Verb
(chin)Etymology 2
(etyl) , from (etyl) cine, (cinu). The Old English term is cognate to Old Saxon kena, and is related to the Old English verb ("to split open, to sprout").Noun
(en noun)- The cottage in a chine .
- In the odorous stillness of the day I thought of the tracks that threaded Egdon Heath, and of benign, elderly Sandbourne, with its chines and sheltered beach-huts.