Conversation vs Visit - What's the difference?
conversation | visit |
Expression and exchange of individual ideas through talking with other people; also, a set instance or occasion of such talking.
* 1699 , ,
*
, title=(The Celebrity), chapter=5
, passage=When this conversation was repeated in detail within the hearing of the young woman in question, and undoubtedly for his benefit, Mr. Trevor threw shame to the winds and scandalized the Misses Brewster then and there by proclaiming his father to have been a country storekeeper.}}
* , chapter=12
, title= (fencing) The back-and-forth play of the blades in a bout.
(obsolete) Interaction; commerce or intercourse with other people; dealing with others.
* 1526 , (William Tyndale), trans. Bible , Acts XI:
(archaic) Behaviour, the way one conducts oneself; a person's way of life.
*, New York Review of Books, 2001, p.50:
(obsolete) Sexual intercourse.
* 1723 , Charles Walker, Memoirs of the Life of Sally Salisbury :
* 1749 , (Henry Fielding), , Folio Society 1973, p. 333:
(computing) The protocol-based interaction between systems processing a transaction.
(nonstandard, ambitransitive) To engage in conversation (with).
* 1983 , James Frederick Mason, Hélène Joséphine Harvitt, The French review
* 1989 , Robert L Gale, A Henry James encyclopedia
* 2002 , Georgie Nickell, I Only Smoke on Thursdays
Of God: to appear to (someone) to comfort, bless, or chastise or punish them. (Now generally merged into later senses, below.)
* Bible, (w) i. 68
* 1611 , Bible , Authorized (King James) Version, (w) I.6:
To habitually go to (someone in distress, sickness etc.) to comfort them. (Now generally merged into later senses, below.)
(intransitive) To go and meet (a person) as an act of friendliness or sociability.
* 1788 , (Edward Gibbon), (The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) , volume 68:
Of a sickness, misfortune etc.: to afflict (someone).
* 1890 , (James George Frazer), (The Golden Bough) :
To inflict punishment, vengeance for (an offense) (on) or (upon) someone.
* 2011 , John Mullan, The Guardian , 2 Dec 2011:
To go to (a shrine, temple etc.) for worship. (Now generally merged into later senses, below.)
To go to (a place) for pleasure, on an errand, etc.
* , chapter=19
, title= A single act of .
*{{quote-book, year=1899, author=(Stephen Crane)
, title=, chapter=1
, passage=There was some laughter, and Roddle was left free to expand his ideas on the periodic visits of cowboys to the town. “Mason Rickets, he had ten big punkins a-sittin' in front of his store, an' them fellers from the Upside-down-F ranch shot 'em up […].”}}
A meeting with a doctor at their surgery or the doctor's at one's home.
As a noun conversation
is conversation.As a verb visit is
to shriek, scream, shrill, screech, squeal, squeak.conversation
English
(wikipedia conversation)Noun
(en noun)Heads designed for an essay on conversations
- Study gives strength to the mind; conversation , grace: the first apt to give stiffness, the other suppleness: one gives substance and form to the statue, the other polishes it.
The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=All this was extraordinarily distasteful to Churchill.
- Yt chaunsed thatt a whole yere they had their conversacion with the congregacion there, and taught moche people insomoche thatt the disciples off Antioche we the fyrst that wer called Christen.
- There are many that take no heed what happeneth to others by bad conversation , and therefore overthrow themselves in the same manner through their own fault, not foreseeing dangers manifest.
- (Ariadne)quitted her Lover (Theseus), for the tumultuous Conversation of (Bacchus).
- The landlady therefore would by no means have admitted any conversation of a disreputable kind to pass under her roof.
Synonyms
* (expression and exchange of ideas through talking) banter, chat, chinwag, dialogue, discussion, interlocution, powwow, table talkDerived terms
* conversational * conversation pieceUsage notes
* To make conversation means to start a conversation with someone with no other aim than to talk and break the silence. * To have' a conversation, and to ' hold a conversation, both mean to converse. * SeeVerb
(en verb)- Gone now are the "high-minded" style, the "adapted from literature" feel, the voice-over narration, and the abstract conversationing about ideas, values...
- ...he has breakfasted me, dined me, conversationed me, absolutely caressed me. He has been really most kind and paternal...
- After all this conversationing , Scottie, my usual dance partner, was getting antsy and wanted to dance.
Statistics
*Anagrams
* ----visit
English
Verb
(en verb)- [God] hath visited and redeemed his people.
- Then she arose with her daughters in law, that she might return from the country of Moab: for she had heard in the country of Moab how that the LORD had visited his people in giving them bread.
- Her life was spared by the clemency of the emperor, but he visited the pomp and treasures of her palace.
- There used to be a sharp contest as to where the effigy was to be made, for the people thought that the house from which it was carried forth would not be visited with death that year.
- If this were an Ibsen play, we would be thinking of the sins of one generation being visited upon another, he said.
The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=Nothing was too small to receive attention, if a supervising eye could suggest improvements likely to conduce to the common welfare. Mr. Gordon Burnage, for instance, personally visited dust-bins and back premises, accompanied by a sort of village bailiff, going his round like a commanding officer doing billets.}}