Dagger vs Dudgeon - What's the difference?
dagger | dudgeon |
(weapon) A stabbing weapon, similar to a sword but with a short, double-edged blade.
* , Act I, Scene I, line 282.
* 1786 , , A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons , page 34.
The text character ; the obelus.
(obsolete) A kind of wood used especially in the handles of knives; the root of the box tree.
(obsolete) A hilt made of this wood.
(archaic) A dagger which has a dudgeon hilt.
A feeling of anger or resentment (usually only in set terms, below).
*
* {{quote-book
, year=1960
, author=
, title=(Jeeves in the Offing)
, section=chapter XI
, passage=[...] with girls of high and haughty spirit you have to watch your step, especially if they have red hair, like Bobbie. If they think you're talking out of turn, dudgeon' ensues, and ' dudgeon might easily lead her to reach for the ginger ale bottle and bean me with it.}}
As nouns the difference between dagger and dudgeon
is that dagger is a stabbing weapon, similar to a sword but with a short, double-edged blade while dudgeon is a kind of wood used especially in the handles of knives; the root of the box tree.As a verb dagger
is to pierce with a dagger; to stab.dagger
English
Etymology 1
Probably from (etyl) dague (1229), related to (etyl), (etyl), (etyl) daga , (etyl) Degen, (etyl) . In English attested from the 1380s. The ultimate origin of the word is unclear. GrimmGrimmsuspects Celtic origin. Others have suggested derivation from an unattested Vulgar Latin http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacia. Chastelain (Dictionaire etymologique'', 1750) thought that French ''dague'' was a derivation from German ''dagge'', ''dagen , although not attested until a much later date). The knightly dagger evolves from the 12th century. Guillaume le Breton (died 1226) uses daca'' in his ''Philippide''. Other Middle Latin forms include ''daga, dagga, dagha, dagger, daggerius, daggerium, dagarium, dagarius, diga''http://ducange.enc.sorbonne.fr/DAGGER; the forms with ''-r- are late 14th century adoptions of the English word). OED points out that there is also an English verb from which this could be a derivation, but the verb is attested only from about 1400. Relation to Old Armenian .
Noun
(en noun)- I bruised my shin th’ other day with playing at sword and dagger with a master of fence; ...
- The dagger , under the title cultellum and misericorde, has been the constant companion of the sword, at least from the days of Edward I. and is mentioned in the statute of Winchester.
