Cowling vs Shroud - What's the difference?
cowling | shroud |
A young or little cow; calf.
*2003 , David Gilet, The Yellow Dot Plague and Other Tales :
A removable protective covering for the engine of an aircraft, motorcycle etc
That which clothes, covers, conceals, or protects; a garment.
* Sandys
Especially, the dress for the dead; a winding sheet.
* Shakespeare
That which covers or shelters like a shroud.
* Byron
A covered place used as a retreat or shelter, as a cave or den; also, a vault or crypt.
* Chapman
* Withals
The branching top of a tree; foliage.
* '>citation
(nautical) A rope or cable serving to support the mast sideways.
* See also Wikipedia article on
One of the two annular plates at the periphery of a water wheel, which form the sides of the buckets; a shroud plate.
To cover with a shroud.
* Francis Bacon
To conceal or hide from view, as if by a shroud.
* Sir Walter Raleigh
* Dryden
To take shelter or harbour.
* Milton
As a proper noun cowling
is .As a noun shroud is
that which clothes, covers, conceals, or protects; a garment.As a verb shroud is
to cover with a shroud.cowling
English
Etymology 1
From .Noun
(en noun)- She nuzzled between the legs—a bull calf. She continued to nuzzle and clean the little pea-green body that was blue with white patches about his cowling parts.
Etymology 2
From .Noun
(wikipedia cowling) (en noun)shroud
English
(wikipedia shroud)Noun
(en noun)- swaddled, as new born, in sable shrouds
- a dead man in his shroud
- Jura answers through her misty shroud .
- The shroud to which he won / His fair-eyed oxen.
- a vault, or shroud , as under a church
Verb
(en verb)- The ancient Egyptian mummies were shrouded in a number of folds of linen besmeared with gums.
- The details of the plot were shrouded in mystery.
- The truth behind their weekend retreat was shrouded in obscurity.
- One of these trees, with all his young ones, may shroud four hundred horsemen.
- Some tempest rise, / And blow out all the stars that light the skies, / To shroud my shame.
- If your stray attendance be yet lodged, / Or shroud within these limits.