Cosign vs Coign - What's the difference?
cosign | coign |
A projecting corner or angle; a cornerstone
* 1922 , James Joyce, Ulysses
*:Kind air defined the coigns of houses in Kildare street.
* 1936 , William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom!!
* 1964 , Anthony Burgess, Nothing Like the Sun
* 1977 , Stephen R. Donaldson, Lord Foul's Bane , ISBN 0-345-34865-6, page 212
* 2007 , Stephen R. Donaldson, Fatal Revenant , ISBN 978-0-399-15446-1, page 3
The keystone of an arch
A wedge used in typesetting
As a verb cosign
is to sign a document jointly with another person, sometimes as an endorsement.As a noun coign is
a projecting corner or angle; a cornerstone.coign
English
Noun
(en noun)- this snug monastic coign , this dreamy and heatless alcove of what we call the best of thought.
- They lay quietly as the morning advanced its little way, hid snug in their greenwood coign . —
- The wall was intricately labored—lined and coigned and serried with regular and irregular groups of windows, balconies, buttresses ...
- In sunshine as vivid as revelation, Linden Avery knelt on the stone of a low-walled coign like a balcony high in the outward face of Revelstone's watchtower.