Crux vs Hinge - What's the difference?
crux | hinge |
The basic, central, or essential point or feature.
The critical or transitional moment or issue, a turning point.
* 1993 , Laurence M. Porter, "Real Dreams, Literary Dreams, and the Fantastic in Literature", pages 32-47 in'' Carol Schreier Rupprecht (ed.) ''The Dream and the Text: Essays on Literature and Language .
A puzzle or difficulty.
The hardest point of a climb.
* 1973 , Pat Armstrong, "Klondike Fever: Seventy Years Too Late", in Backpacker , Autumn 1973, page 84:
* 2004 , Craig Luebben, Rock Climbing: Mastering Basic Skills , The Mountaineers Books, ISBN 9780898867435,
* 2009 , R. J. Secor, The High Sierra: Peaks, Passes, and Trails , Third Edition, The Mountaineers Books, ISBN 9780898869712,
(heraldiccharge) A cross on a coat of arms.
A jointed or flexible device that allows the pivoting of a door etc. See also pintel.
A stamp hinge, a folded and gummed paper rectangle for affixing postage stamps in an album.
A principle, or a point in time, on which subsequent reasonings or events depend.
(statistics) The median of the upper or lower half of a batch, sample, or probability distribution.
One of the four cardinal points, east, west, north, or south.
* Creech
* Milton
To attach by, or equip with a hinge.
To depend on something.
archaeology The breaking off of the distal end of a knapped stone flake whose presumed course across the face of the stone core was truncated prematurely, leaving not a feathered distal end but instead the scar of a nearly perpendicular break.
(obsolete) To bend.
As nouns the difference between crux and hinge
is that crux is the basic, central, or essential point or feature while hinge is a jointed or flexible device that allows the pivoting of a door etc. See also pintel.As a proper noun Crux
is a distinctive winter constellation of the southern sky, shaped like a cross. It appears in the flags of several countries in Oceania.As a verb hinge is
to attach by, or equip with a hinge.crux
English
Noun
(en-noun)- The crux of her argument was that the roadways needed repair before anything else could be accomplished.
- The mad certitude of the ogre, Abel Tiffauges, that he stands at the crux of history and that he will be able to raise Prussia "to a higher power" (p. 180), contrasts sharply with the anxiety and doubt attendant upon most modern literary dreams.
- The perpetual crux of New Testament chronologists. — Strauss.
- The final half-mile was the crux of the climb.
page 179:
- Most pitches have a distinct crux', or tough spot; some have multiple '''cruxes'''. ¶ Climb efficiently on the "cruiser" sections to stay fresh for the ' cruxes .
page 51:
- Continue climbing the groove; the crux is passing some vegetation on the second pitch.
hinge
English
(wikipedia hinge)Noun
(en noun)- This argument was the hinge on which the question turned.
- When the moon is in the hinge at East.
- Nor slept the winds / Within their stony caves, but rush'd abroad / From the four hinges of the world.
Synonyms
* (device upon which a door hangs) har * (statistics) quartileDerived terms
* hinge line, hingeline * hinge termination * lower hinge * midhinge * rehinge * upper hinge * hingeableVerb
- The flake hinged at an inclusion in the core.
- (Shakespeare)