Engine vs Index - What's the difference?
engine | index |
(obsolete) Ingenuity; cunning, trickery, guile.
(obsolete) The result of cunning; something ingenious, a contrivance; (in negative senses) a plot, a scheme.
* 1590 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , II.i:
(obsolete) Natural talent; genius.
Anything used to effect a purpose; any device or contrivance; an agent.
* Bunyan
* Shakespeare
A large construction used in warfare, such as a battering ram, catapult etc.
* 1714 , (Bernard Mandeville), The Fable of the Bees :
A complex mechanical device which converts energy into useful motion or physical effects.
A person or group of people which influence a larger group; a driving force.
The part of a car or other vehicle which provides the force for motion, now especially one powered by internal combustion.
A self-powered vehicle, especially a locomotive, used for pulling cars along a track.
(computing) A software or hardware system responsible for a specific technical task (usually with qualifying word).
(obsolete) To assault with an engine.
* (rfdate) T. Adams.
(dated) To equip with an engine; said especially of steam vessels.
(obsolete) To rack; to torture.
An alphabetical listing of items and their location.
The index finger; the forefinger.
A movable finger on a gauge, scale, etc.
(printing) A symbol resembling a pointing hand, used to direct particular attention to a note or paragraph.
That which points out; that which shows, indicates, manifests, or discloses.
* Arbuthnot
A sign; an indication; a token.
* Robert Louis Stevenson
(linguistics) A type of noun where the meaning of the form changes with respect to the context. E.g., 'Today's newspaper' is an indexical form since its referent will differ depending on the context. See also icon and symbol.
(economics) A single number calculated from an array of prices or of quantities.
(science) A number representing a property or ratio, a coefficient.
(mathematics) A raised suffix indicating a power.
(programming, computing) An integer or other key indicating the location of data e.g. within an array, vector, database table, associative array, or hash table.
(computing, databases) A data structure that improves the performance of operations on a table.
(obsolete) A prologue indicating what follows.
To arrange an index for something, especially a long text.
To inventory, to take stock.
As nouns the difference between engine and index
is that engine is (obsolete) ingenuity; cunning, trickery, guile while index is index.As a verb engine
is (obsolete) to assault with an engine.engine
English
(wikipedia engine) (Engines)Noun
(en noun)- Therefore this craftie engine he did frame, / Against his praise to stirre vp enmitye [...].
- You see the ways the fisherman doth take / To catch the fish; what engines doth he make?
- Their promises, enticements, oaths, tokens, and all these engines of lust.
- Flattery must be the most powerful Argument that cou'd be used to Human Creatures. Making use of this bewitching Engine , they extoll'd the Excellency of our Nature above other Animals [...].
- a graphics engine'''; a physics '''engine
Synonyms
* motorDerived terms
* aero engine * aircraft engine * diesel engine * engine driver * engine trouble * engineer * fire engine * four-stroke engine * jet engine * marine engine * search engine * steam engine * tank engine * two-stroke engineVerb
(engin)- To engine and batter our walls.
- Vessels are often built by one firm and engined by another.
- (Chaucer)
External links
* * English refractory feminine rhymesindex
English
(wikipedia index)Noun
(en-noun)- The index of a book lists words or expressions and the pages of the book upon which they are to be found.
- Tastes are the indexes of the different qualities of plants.
- His son's empty guffaws struck him with pain as the indices of a weak mind.
- (Shakespeare)
