Dint vs Diet - What's the difference?
dint | diet |
(label) A blow, stroke, especially dealt in a fight.
*, I.i:
*:Much daunted with that dint , her sence was dazd.
* 1600 , (Edward Fairfax), The (Jerusalem Delivered) of (w), XI, xxxi:
*:Between them cross-bows stood, and engines wrought / To cast a stone, a quarry, or a dart, // From whence, like thunder's dint , or lightnings new, / Against the bulwarks stones and lances flew.
Force, power; especially in (by dint of).
*(William Shakespeare) (c.1564–1616)
*:Now you weep; and, I perceive, you feel / The dint of pity.
*Sir (Walter Scott) (1771-1832)
*:It was by dint of passing strength / That he moved the massy stone at length.
The mark left by a blow; an indentation or impression made by violence; a dent.
* (1809-1892)
*:every dint a sword had beaten in it [the shield]
:(Dryden)
To dent
* {{quote-book, year=1915, author=Jeffery Farnol, title=Beltane The Smith, chapter=, edition=
, passage=And, in that moment came one, fierce and wild of aspect, in dinted casque and rusty mail who stood and watched--ah God! }}
* {{quote-book, year=1854, author=W. Harrison Ainsworth, title=The Star-Chamber, Volume 2, chapter=, edition=
, passage=Your helmet was dinted in as if by a great shot. }}
(senseid)The food and beverage a person or animal consumes.
(countable) A controlled regimen of food and drink, as to gain or lose weight or otherwise influence health.
By extension, any habitual intake or consumption.
(countable) A council or assembly of leaders; a formal deliberative assembly.
To regulate the food of (someone); to put on a diet.
*, I.iii.1.2:
* Spenser
To modify one's food and beverage intake so as to decrease or increase body weight or influence health.
(obsolete) To eat; to take one's meals.
* Francis Bacon
(obsolete) To cause to take food; to feed.
* Othello
As a noun dint
is (label) a blow, stroke, especially dealt in a fight.As a verb dint
is to dent.As a contraction dint
is .As an abbreviation diet is
(microbiology).dint
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) dint, dent, . More at (l).Alternative forms
* (l)Noun
Derived terms
* by dint ofVerb
(en verb)citation
citation
Etymology 2
Contraction
(head)Anagrams
* ----diet
English
(wikipedia diet)Alternative forms
* (rare)Noun
(en noun)- The diet of the Giant Panda consists mainly of bamboo.
- He's been reading a steady diet of nonfiction for the last several years.
Derived terms
* dietarian * dietary * dieter * dieteticsVerb
(en verb)- they will diet themselves, feed and live alone.
- She diets him with fasting every day.
- I've been dieting for six months, and have lost some weight.
- Let himdiet in such places, where there is good company of the nation, where he travelleth.
- But partly led to diet my revenge […].