Draw vs Abstract - What's the difference?
draw | abstract |
(lb) To move or develop something.
#To sketch; depict with lines; to produce a picture with pencil, crayon, chalk, etc. on paper, cardboard, etc.
#*(Oliver Goldsmith) (1730-1774)
#*:A flattering painter who made it his care / To draw men as they ought to be, not as they are.
#*(Matthew Prior) (1664-1721)
#*:Can I, untouched, the fair one's passions move, / Or thou draw beauty and not feel its power?
#*{{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham), title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=3 #To deduce or infer.
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#(lb) (of drinks, especially tea) To leave temporarily so as to allow the flavour to increase.
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#(lb) To take or procure from a place of deposit; to call for and receive from a fund, etc.
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#To take into the lungs; to inhale.
#*
#*:Serene, smiling, enigmatic, she faced him with no fear whatever showing in her dark eyes.She put back a truant curl from her forehead where it had sought egress to the world, and looked him full in the face now, drawing a deep breath which caused the round of her bosom to lift the lace at her throat.
#*1979 , (Monty Python), (Always Look on the Bright Side of Life)
#*:So always look on the bright side of death / Just before you draw your terminal breath
#(lb) To move; to come or go.
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#(lb) To obtain from some cause or origin; to infer from evidence or reasons; to deduce from premises; to derive.
#*(Edmund Burke) (1729-1797)
#*:We do not draw the moral lessons we might from history.
# To withdraw.
#*(William Shakespeare) (1564-1616)
#*:Go, wash thy face, and draw thy action.
#(lb) To draw up (a document).
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#*(William Shakespeare) (1564-1616)
#*:Clerk, draw a deed of gift.
(lb) To exert or experience force.
#(lb) To drag, pull.
#*
, chapter=4, title= #*1918 , (Edgar Rice Burroughs), , Chapter VIII
#*:Lys shuddered, and I put my arm around her and drew her to me; and thus we sat throughout the hot night. She told me of her abduction and of the fright she had undergone, and together we thanked God that she had come through unharmed, because the great brute had dared not pause along the danger-infested way.
#*
#*:At the last moment Mollie, the foolish, pretty white mare who drew Mr. Jones's trap, came mincing daintily in, chewing at a lump of sugar.
#(lb) To pull; to exert strength in drawing anything; to have force to move anything by pulling.
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#To pull out (as a gun from a holster, or a tooth).
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#To undergo the action of pulling or dragging.
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#(lb) To pull back the bowstring and its arrow in preparation for shooting.
#(of curtains, etc.) To close.
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#(lb) To take the top card of a deck into hand.
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To remove or separate or displace.
#To extract a liquid, or cause a liquid to come out, primarily water or blood.
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#*Bible, (w) iv. 11
#*:The woman saith unto him, Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep.
#*(George Cheyne) (1671-1743)
#*:Spirits, by distillations, may be drawn out of vegetable juices, which shall flame and fume of themselves.
#To drain by emptying; to suck dry.
#*1705 ,
#*:Sucking and drawing the breast dischargeth the milk as fast as it can be generated.
#(lb) To extract; to force out; to elicit; to derive.
#*(William Shakespeare) (1564-1616)
#*:until you had drawn oaths from him
#To sink in water; to require a depth for floating.
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#*(William Shakespeare) (1564-1616)
#*:Greater hulks draw deep.
# To work as an epispastic; said of a blister, poultice, etc.
# To have a draught; to transmit smoke, gases, etc.
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#(lb) To consume, for example, power.
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(lb) To change in size or shape.
#To extend in length; to lengthen; to protract; to stretch.
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#*(William Shakespeare) (1564-1616)
#*:How long her face is drawn !
#*(John Richard Green) (1837-1883)
#*:the huge Offa's dike which he drew from the mouth of Wye to that of Dee
#(lb) To become contracted; to shrink.
#*(Francis Bacon) (1561-1626)
#*:to draw into less room
(lb) To attract or be attracted.
#To attract.
#:
#*, chapter=5
, title= #*{{quote-book, year=1935, author=
, title=Death on the Centre Court, chapter=5
, passage=By one o'clock the place was choc-a-bloc. […] The restaurant was packed, and the promenade between the two main courts and the subsidiary courts was thronged with healthy-looking youngish people, drawn to the Mecca of tennis from all parts of the country.}}
#(lb) To search for game.
#*1928 , (Siegfried Sassoon), (Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man) , Penguin 2013, p.87:
#*:On one of my expeditions, after a stormy night, at the end of March, the hounds drew all day without finding a fox.
#To cause.
#*{{quote-news, year=2011, date=July 3, author=Piers Newbury, work=BBC Sport
, title= #(lb) To exert an attractive force; to act as an inducement or enticement.
#*(Joseph Addison) (1672-1719)
#*:Keep a watch upon the particular bias of their minds, that it may not draw too much.
(Usually as draw on' or ' draw upon ): to rely on; utilize as a source.
:
*(John Jay) (1745-1829)
*:You may draw on me for the expenses of your journey.
*{{quote-magazine, year=2012, month=March-April, author=John T. Jost
, volume=100, issue=2, page=162, magazine=(American Scientist)
, title= To disembowel.
:
* (1663-1712)
*:In private draw your poultry, clean your tripe.
To end a game in a (with neither side winning).
:
*{{quote-book, year=1922, year_published=2010 , edition=HTML, author=(Edgar Rice Burroughs)
, title= (lb) A random process.
#To select by the drawing of lots.
#:
#*1784 , (Edward Augustus Freeman), [https://archive.org/details/essayonparliamen00edinuoft An essay on parliamentary representation, and the magistracies of our boroughs royal:
#*:Provided magistracies were filled by men freely chosen or drawn .
#(lb) To win in a lottery or similar game of chance.
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#(lb) To trade in cards for replacements in draw poker games; to attempt to improve one's hand with future cards. See also draw out .
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(lb) To make a shot that lands in the house without hitting another stone.
The result of a contest in which neither side has won; a tie.
The procedure by which the result of a lottery is determined.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=January 29
, author=Chris Bevan
, title=Torquay 0 - 1 Crawley Town
, work=BBC
(cricket) The result of a two-innings match in which at least one side did not complete all their innings before time ran out. Different from a tie.
(golf) A golf shot that (for the right-handed player) curves intentionally to the left. See hook, slice, fade
(curling) A shot that lands in the house without hitting another stone.
(geography) A dry stream bed that drains surface water only during periods of heavy rain or flooding.
* 1918 , , Mirado Modern Classics, paperback edition, page 15
(colloquial) Cannabis.
In a commission-based job, an advance on future (potential) commissions given to an employee by the employer.
(poker) A situation in which one or more players has four cards of the same suit or four out of five necessary cards for a straight and requires a further card to make their flush or straight.
*
The schedule of games in a -
(archery) The act of pulling back the strings in preparation of firing.
An abridgement or summary.
* — An abstract of every treatise he had read.
Something that concentrates in itself the qualities of larger item, or multiple items.
* — Man, the abstract Of all perfection, which the workmanship Of Heaven hath modeled.
# Concentrated essence of a product.
# (medicine) A powdered solid extract of a medicinal substance mixed with lactose.
An abstraction; an term; that which is abstract.
* — The concretes "father" and "son" have, or might have, the abstracts "paternity" and "filiety".
The theoretical way of looking at things; something that exists only in idealized form.
(arts) An abstract work of art.
(real estate) A summary title of the key points detailing a tract of land, for ownership; abstract of title.
(obsolete) Derived; extracted.
(now, rare) Drawn away; removed from; apart from; separate.
* 17th century , , The Oxford Dictionary :
Expressing a property or attribute separately of an object that is considered to be inherent to that object.
Considered apart from any application to a particular object; not concrete; ideal; non-specific; general, as opposed to specific.
* - A concrete name is a name which stands for a thing; an abstract' name which stands for an attribute of a thing. A practice has grown up in more modern times, which, if not introduced by Locke, has gained currency from his example, of applying the expression "' abstract name" to all names which are the result of abstraction and generalization, and consequently to all general names, instead of confining it to the names of attributes.
Difficult to understand; abstruse; hard to conceptualize.
*
(archaic) Absent-minded.
* Milton
*
(arts) Pertaining to the formal aspect of art, such as the lines, colors, shapes, and the relationships among them.
# (arts, often, capitalized) Free from representational qualities, in particular the non-representational styles of the 20th century.
# (music) Absolute.
# (dance) Lacking a story.
Insufficiently factual.
Apart from practice or reality; vague; theoretical; impersonal; not applied.
(grammar) As a noun, denoting an intangible as opposed to an object, place, or person.
(computing) Of a class in object-oriented programming, being a partial basis for subclasses rather than a complete template for objects.
To separate; to disengage.
* - He was incapable of forming any opinion or resolution abstracted from his own prejudices.
To remove; to take away; withdraw.
*
* Sir Walter Scott
(euphemistic) To steal; to take away; to remove without permission.
* - Von Rosen had quietly abstracted the bearing-reins from the harness.
To summarize; to abridge; to epitomize.
(obsolete) To extract by means of distillation.
*
To consider abstractly; to contemplate separately or by itself; to consider theoretically; to look at as a general quality.
*
(intransitive, reflexive, literally, figuratively) To withdraw oneself; to retire.
To draw off (interest or attention).
* , Blackwood's Magazine - The young stranger had been abstracted and silent.
(rare) To perform the process of abstraction.
* - I own myself able to abstract in one sense.
(fine arts) To create abstractions.
(computing) To produce an abstraction, usually by refactoring existing code. Generally used with "out".
As nouns the difference between draw and abstract
is that draw is the result of a contest in which neither side has won; a tie while abstract is abstract.As a verb draw
is (lb) to move or develop something .draw
English
Verb
citation, passage=Sepia Delft tiles surrounded the fireplace, their crudely drawn Biblical scenes in faded cyclamen blending with the pinkish pine, while above them, instead of a mantelshelf, there was an archway high enough to form a balcony with slender balusters and a tapestry-hung wall behind.}}
Lord Stranleigh Abroad, passage=“[…] No rogue e’er felt the halter draw , with a good opinion of the law, and perhaps my own detestation of the law arises from my having frequently broken it.
Richard Wiseman], ''[http://books.google.com.au/books?id=P5EIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA303&dq=%22wiseman+on+tumours%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=kIu-UsSULcvbkAWjoYDICw&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=%22wiseman%20on%20tumours%22&f=false Tumours, Gun Shot Wounds, &c.
Mr. Pratt's Patients, passage=When you're well enough off so's you don't have to fret about anything but your heft or your diseases you begin to get queer, I suppose. And the queerer the cure for those ailings the bigger the attraction. A place like the Right Livers' Rest was bound to draw' freaks, same as molasses ' draws flies.}}
George Goodchild
Wimbledon 2011: Novak Djokovic beats Rafael Nadal in final, passage=In a desperately tight opening set, the pace and accuracy of the Serbian's groundstrokes began to draw errors from the usually faultless Nadal and earned him the first break point of the day at 5-4.}}
Social Justice: Is It in Our Nature (and Our Future)?, passage=He draws eclectically on studies of baboons, descriptive anthropological accounts of hunter-gatherer societies and, in a few cases, the fossil record.}}
The Chessmen of Mars, publisher=The Gutenberg Project , passage=The game is won when a player places any of his pieces on the same square with his opponent's Princess, or when a Chief takes a Chief. It is drawn when a Chief is taken by any opposing piece other than the opposing Chief;
Derived terms
* draw a bath * drawback * drawbridge * drawing * draw in one's horns * drawl * drawmaster * draw one's last breath * draw out * draw raise * drawth * draw the line * draw up * draw weightNoun
(en noun)- The game ended in a draw .
- The draw is on Saturday.
citation, page= , passage=Having spent more than £500,000 on players last summer, Crawley can hardly be classed as minnows but they have still punched way above their weight and this kind of performance means no-one will relish pulling them out of the hat in Sunday's draw .}}
- The garden, curiously enough, was a quarter of a mile from the house, and the way to it led up a shallow draw past the cattle corral.
NRL Fixtures - 2011 NRL Draw
Synonyms
* (The result of a contest in which neither side has won) stalemate * (dry stream bed that drains water during periods of heavy precipitation) dry creekDerived terms
* luck of the draw * meat draw * quick on the drawabstract
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl), from (etyl) abstractus, perfect passive participle of .Noun
(en noun)Usage notes
* (theoretical way of looking at things) Preceded, typically, by the .Synonyms
* (statement summarizing the important points of a text) abridgment, compendium, epitome, synopsisDerived terms
* abstract of titleAdjective
(en-adj)- The more abstract we are from the body ... the more fit we shall be to behold divine light.
- abstract , as in a trance
Synonyms
* (not applied or practical) conceptual, theoretical * (insufficiently factual) formal * (difficult to understand) abstruseAntonyms
* (not applied or practical) applied, practical * (considered apart from concrete existence) concreteDerived terms
* abstractly * abstractness * abstract idea * abstract noun * abstract numbers * abstract termsSee also
* reifyEtymology 2
First attested in 1542. Partly from' English abstract (adjective form), ' and from (etyl) abstrat past participle of .Verb
(en verb)- He was incapable of forming any opinion or resolution abstracted from his own prejudices.
- (Franklin)
- He was wholly abstracted by other objects.
- He abstracted out the square root function.
