Extraction vs Exhaust - What's the difference?
extraction | exhaust |
An act of extracting or the condition of being extracted.
A person's origin or ancestry.
Something extracted, an extract, as from a plant or an organ of an animal etc.
* Milton
(military) An act of removing someone from a hostile area to a secure location.
(dentistry) A removal of a tooth from its socket.
To draw or let out wholly; to drain off completely; as, to exhaust the water of a well; the moisture of the earth is exhausted by evaporation.
To empty by drawing or letting out the contents; as, to exhaust a well, or a treasury.
To drain, metaphorically; to use or expend wholly, or till the supply comes to an end; to deprive wholly of strength; to use up; to weary or tire out; to wear out; as, to exhaust one's strength, patience, or resources.
To bring out or develop completely; to discuss thoroughly; as, to exhaust a subject.
(chemistry) To subject to the action of various solvents in order to remove all soluble substances or extractives; as, to exhaust a drug successively with water, alcohol, and ether.
A system consisting of the parts of an engine through which burned gases or steam are discharged; see also exhaust system.
The steam let out of a cylinder after it has done its work there.
The foul air let out of a room through a register or pipe provided for the purpose.
* {{quote-book, year=2006, author=
, title=Internal Combustion
, chapter=1 An exhaust pipe, especially on a motor vehicle.
Short for .
(obsolete) Exhausted; used up.
As nouns the difference between extraction and exhaust
is that extraction is an act of extracting or the condition of being extracted while exhaust is a system consisting of the parts of an engine through which burned gases or steam are discharged; see also exhaust system.As a verb exhaust is
to draw or let out wholly; to drain off completely; as, to exhaust the water of a well; the moisture of the earth is exhausted by evaporation.As an adjective exhaust is
exhausted; used up.extraction
English
Noun
(en noun)- They [books] do preserve as in a vial the purest efficacy and extraction of that living intellect that bred them.
Synonyms
* descent, lineageexhaust
English
Verb
(en verb)- A decrepit, exhausted old man at fifty-five. --Motley.
Synonyms
* spend, consume * tire out, weary * See alsoNoun
(en noun)citation, passage=If successful, Edison and Ford—in 1914—would move society away from the
