Crosshead vs Pillory - What's the difference?
crosshead | pillory |
A framework on a post, with holes for the hands and head, used as a means of punishment and humiliation.
To put in a pillory.
To subject to humiliation, scorn, ridicule or abuse.
To criticize harshly.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=September 24
, author=Aled Williams
, title=Chelsea 4 - 1 Swansea
, work=BBC Sport
As nouns the difference between crosshead and pillory
is that crosshead is (engineering) a metal beam that connects a piston to a connecting rod in an engine while pillory is a framework on a post, with holes for the hands and head, used as a means of punishment and humiliation.As a verb pillory is
to put in a pillory.crosshead
English
pillory
English
(wikipedia pillory)Noun
(pillories)Verb
(en-verb)citation, page= , passage=The breakthrough came through Torres who, pilloried for his miss against Manchester United a week earlier, scored his second goal of the season.}}
