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Finger vs Dinger - What's the difference?

finger | dinger |

As a proper noun finger

is .

As a noun dinger is

.

finger

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • (label) One of the long extremities of the hand, sometimes excluding the thumb.
  • * 1915 , (Eleanor Stackhouse Atkinson), ,
  • We have five senses and five fingers' and five toes. The starfish eats with five ' fingers .
  • * 1916 , The Finger Talk of Chicago's Wheat-Pit'', '':
  • Each finger' extended represents one-eighth of a cent. Thus when all four ' fingers and the thumb are extended, all being spread out from one another, it means five-eighths.
  • * {{quote-magazine, date=2014-03-29, volume=410, issue=8880, magazine=(The Economist)
  • , title= Don’t cramp my style , passage=In 1993 [Victor Candia] noticed that the fingers of his left hand were starting to curl up as he played [on his guitar]. It felt to him as if a magnet in his palm were preventing him from opening them. A week later, he could not play at all.}}
  • A piece of food resembling such an extremity.
  • Anything that does work of a finger, such as the pointer of a clock or watch, or a small projecting rod, wire, or piece in a mechanical device which is brought into contact with an object to effect, direct, or restrain a motion.
  • (also finger pier) A walkway extending from a dock, an airport terminal, etc, used by passengers to board a waiting ship or aeroplane.
  • An amount of liquid, usually alcohol, in a glass, with the depth of a finger's length.
  • The breadth of a finger, or the fourth part of the hand; a measure of nearly an inch; also, the length of finger, a measure in domestic use in the United States, of about four and a half inches or one eighth of a yard.
  • * Bishop (John Wilkins) (1614-1672)
  • a piece of steel three fingers thick
  • Skill in the use of the fingers, as in playing upon a musical instrument.
  • * (1755-1838)
  • She has a good finger .

    Derived terms

    * at one's fingertips * burn one's fingers * butterfingers * cross one's fingers * fat-finger * finger alphabet * finger bowl * finger buffet * finger chip * finger dry * finger food * finger language * finger mark * finger millet * finger painting * finger pick * finger post * finger roll * finger wave * fingerboard * fingered * fingering * fingerling * fingermark * fingernail * finger-paint * fingerpicking * fingerplate * fingerpost * fingerprint * fingerspelling * fingerstall * fingertip * finger-wagging * fish finger * five-finger discount * five-finger exercise * forefinger * get one's finger out * get one's fingers onto * give the finger to * have a finger in every pie * have one's fingers in many pies * have one's fingers in the till * index finger * ladyfinger * lay a finger on * lift a finger * little finger * long finger * middle finger * one's fingers itch * point the finger at * pull one's finger on * put the finger on * putty in someone's fingers * ring finger * skirt finger * slip through one's fingers * snap one's fingers * split finger * sticky fingers * trigger finger * wag a finger (at) * work one's fingers to the bone * wrap around one's fingers * zinc finger

    Verb

    (en verb)
  • To identify or point out. Also put the finger on . To report to or identify for the authorities, rat on, rat out, squeal on, tattle on, turn in, to finger.
  • To poke or probe with a finger or fingers.
  • * Shakespeare
  • Let the papers lie; / You would be fingering them to anger me.
  • * 2009 , Win Blevins, Dreams Beneath Your Feet , page 135:
  • Feeling tender around the face, she fingered herself gingerly. Yes, it was swollen, very sore around the cheekbones, with dried blood on the outsides of her eye sockets, below her nostrils, and below one ear.
  • To use the fingers to penetrate and sexually stimulate one's own or another person's vagina or anus; to fingerbang
  • * 2007 , Madeline Bastinado, A Talent for Surrender , page 201:
  • She fingered him, spreading the gel and sliding the tip of her finger inside him.
  • * 2008 , Thomas Wainwright (editor), Erotic Tales , page 56:
  • She smiled, a look of amazement on her face, as if thinking that maybe this was the cock that she had been fantasizing about just now, as she fingered herself to a massive, body-engulfing orgasm.
  • (music) To use specified finger positions in producing notes on a musical instrument.
  • (music) To provide instructions in written music as to which fingers are to be used to produce particular notes or passages.
  • (computing) To query (a user's status) using the (Finger protocol).
  • * 1996 , "Yves Bellefeuille", List of useful freeware'', comp.archives.msdos.d, ''Usenet :
  • PGP mail welcome (finger me for my key).
  • (obsolete) To steal; to purloin.
  • (Shakespeare)
  • To execute, as any delicate work.
  • Synonyms

    * (sexual) fingerbang, fingerfuck

    See also

    * artiodactyl * dactyl * dactylography * dactylology * fingle * macrodactyly * perissodactyl * prestidigitation * pterodactyl

    Anagrams

    * 1000 English basic words ----

    dinger

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A bell or chime.
  • * 1997 , Sarah Gregory, Public Trust , Signet (1997), ISBN 9780451190765, page 47:
  • Sharon patted the dinger to call for service.
  • (baseball) A home run.
  • The starting pitcher gave up three dingers .
  • * 1989 , John Holway, " Strikeouts: The High Cost of Hitting Home Runs", Baseball Digest , June 1989:
  • He should know, he fanned 2597 times — far more than any other man — but made millions hitting 563 dingers .
  • * 1997 , Hank Davis, Small-Town Heroes: Images of Minor League Baseball , University of Nebraska Press (2003), ISBN 0803266391, page 264:
  • Then as you're taking his picture, say something about the thirty dingers he's going to hit this season. You get that little extra smile on his face.
  • * 2008 , , The Great Book of Detroit Sports Lists , Running Press (2008), ISBN 9780762433544, page 209:
  • For you youngsters out there, hitting 50 dingers in the pre-steroid craze days of the early 90s was an actual accomplishment; the only questionable substance Fielder was putting in his body were McRib sandwiches.
  • (North America, slang) The penis.
  • * 1994 , Max Evans, Bluefeather Fellini in the Sacred Realm , University Press of Colorado (1994), ISBN 9780553565409, page 131:
  • "He had a red wool sock on his dinger . That's all."
  • (Australian slang, dated) A condom.
  • (Australian slang) The buttocks, the anus.
  • Let?s leave them to sit on their dingers for a while.
  • * 1955 , Norman Bartlett, Island Victory , Angus and Robertson (1955), page 6:
  • "We'd get even more out of 'em if some of the pilots sat on their dingers less and polished their kites more."
  • * 1979 , Derek Maitland, Breaking Out , Allen Lane (1979), page 63:
  • And why had he belted the Australian envoy flat on his dinger in that Spanish bar?
  • * 1988 , Peter Pinney, The Barbarians: A Soldier's New Guinea Diary , University of Queensland Press (1988), ISBN 9780702221583, page 109:
  • "Yeah? Well, stand up anyone who's got a three-inch mortar hid up his dinger !"
  • (Australian slang) A catapult, a shanghai.
  • * 2010 , , Racial Folly: A Twentieth-Century Aboriginal Family , Anu E Press (2010), ISBN 9781921666209, page 59:
  • We made our 'dingers' (as we called them) out of truck tyre inner tubes that were heavy-duty rubber that could shoot a stone a very long distance.

    Synonyms

    * (penis) see also * ding * (condom) franger * See also

    See also

    * double * single * triple

    Anagrams

    *