Factitious vs Clinch - What's the difference?
factitious | clinch |
Created by humans; artificial.
* 1661 , Robert Lovell, a Compleat History of Animals and Minerals , page
*1854 , Thoreau, Walden ,
*:Most men, even in this comparatively free country, through mere ignorance and mistake, are so occupied with the factitious cares and superfluously coarse labors of life that its finer fruits cannot be plucked by them.
*1860 , Emerson, Conduct of life ,
*:Manners are partly factitious , but, mainly, there must be capacity for culture in the blood. Else all culture is vain.
Counterfeit, fabricated, fake.
* 1847 , George Payne Rainsford James, A Whim, and Its Consequences , Chapter XXIV,
*1908 , Arnold Bennett, The Old Wives' Tale ,
*:"Well, mater," he said, in a voice of factitious calm, "I've got it." He was looking up at the ceiling.
*:"Got what?"
*:"The National Scholarship. Swynnerton says it's a sheer fluke. But I've got it. Great glory for the Bursley School of Art!"
* 2008 , Richard L. Hume & Jerry B. Gough, Blacks, Carpetbaggers, and Scalawags: The Constitutional Conventions of Radical Reconstruction , Louisiana State University Press (2008), ISBN 9780807133248,
To clasp; to interlock.
To make certain; to finalize.
*{{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 29
, author=Neil Johnston
, title=Norwich 3 - 3 Blackburn
, work=BBC Sport
To fasten securely or permanently.
To bend and hammer the point of (a nail) so it cannot be removed.
To embrace passionately.
To hold firmly; to clench.
* Dryden
To set closely together; to close tightly.
Any of several fastenings.
The act or process of holding fast; that which serves to hold fast; a grip or grasp.
(obsolete) A pun.
(nautical) A hitch or bend by which a rope is made fast to the ring of an anchor, or the breeching of a ship's gun to the ringbolts.
A passionate embrace.
As an adjective factitious
is created by humans; artificial.As a verb clinch is
to clasp; to interlock.As a noun clinch is
any of several fastenings.factitious
English
Adjective
(en adjective)351
- [...] if from erosion of the gums, by such things as restore them, strengthen and bind them; if wanting'', it may be helped by the factitious ; their ''?ordes are removed, by washing and cleaning them; and their blacknesse, by dentifrices.
page 208:
- To prevent a prisoner's escape, to prevent his suborning testimony, and arranging a factitious tale with those without, may justify many precautions."
page 168:
- Ironically, the most stereotypical myth of Reconstructionism — involving perceived endemic corruption and ruthless exploitation of hapless native whites by freedman and carpetbaggers seeking to gain from black rule — is a factitious story of postwar South Carolina, as told with considerable and lurid exaggeration in two "classic" accounts
Derived terms
* factitiously * factitiousnessSee also
* fictitiousclinch
English
Verb
(es)- I already planned to buy the car, but the color was what really clinched it for me.
citation, page= , passage=Vincent Kompany was sent off after conceding a penalty that was converted by Stephen Hunt to give Wolves hope. But Adam Johnson's curling shot in stoppage time clinched the points.}}
- Clinch the pointed spear.
- to clinch the teeth or the fist
- (Jonathan Swift)
Noun
(es)- to get a good clinch of an antagonist, or of a weapon
- to secure anything by a clinch
- (Alexander Pope)