Attachment vs Forfeit - What's the difference?
attachment | forfeit |
The act or process of (physically or figuratively) attaching.
* 2005 , Rebecca N. Baergen, Manual of Benirschke and Kaufmann's Pathology of the Human Placenta , page 71:
A strong bonding towards or with.
A dependence, especially a strong one.
* 2003 , Griffith Edwards, Alcohol: The World's Favorite Drug , page 63:
A device attached to a piece of equipment or a tool.
* 1978 , Walter H. Wager, Time of reckoning , page 194:
The means by which something is physically attached.
* 2012 , Sinikka Elliott, Not My Kid: What Parents Believe about the Sex Lives of Their Teenagers , page 46:
(computing) A file sent along with an email.
(legal) Taking a person's property to satisfy a court-ordered debt.
(meteorology) The act or process by which any (downward) leader connects to any available (upward) streamer in a lightning flash.
* 2009 , Jakke Mäkelä, Eero Karvinen, Niko Porjo, Antti Mäkelä and Tapio Tuomi, Attachment of Natural Lightning Flashes to Trees: Preliminary Statistical Characteristics'', published in the ''Journal of Lightning Research , volume 1
A penalty for or consequence of a misdemeanor.
A thing forfeited; that which is taken from somebody in requital of a misdeed committed; that which is lost, or the right to which is alienated, by a crime, breach of contract, etc.
* Shakespeare
Something deposited and redeemable by a sportive fine as part of a game.
* Goldsmith
(obsolete, rare) Injury; wrong; mischief.
* Ld. Berners
To suffer the loss of something by wrongdoing or non-compliance
To lose a contest, game, match, or other form of competition by voluntary withdrawal, by failing to attend or participate, or by violation of the rules
To be guilty of a misdeed; to be criminal; to transgress.
To fail to keep an obligation.
* Shakespeare
Lost or alienated for an offense or crime; liable to penal seizure.
* Shakespeare
* Emerson
As nouns the difference between attachment and forfeit
is that attachment is the act or process of (physically or figuratively) attaching while forfeit is a penalty for or consequence of a misdemeanor.As a verb forfeit is
to suffer the loss of something by wrongdoing or non-compliance.As an adjective forfeit is
lost or alienated for an offense or crime; liable to penal seizure.attachment
English
Noun
- The “implantation window” is a short, specific phase during which attachment of the blastocyst occurs.
- I have such an attachment towards my fiancé!
- Through every other kind of drug experience, however, ran his attachment to alcohol.
- Zimchenko's phone had a tape attachment ,
- [The umbilical cord is] the attachment connecting the fetus with the placenta.
- attachment of earnings
Derived terms
* attachment disorder ----forfeit
English
Noun
(en noun)- That he our deadly forfeit should release'' (John Milton, ''On the Morning of Christ's Nativity , 1629)
- He who murders pays the forfeit of his own life.
- Thy slanders I forgive; and therewithal / Remit thy other forfeits .
- Country dances and forfeits shortened the rest of the day.
- to seek arms upon people and country that never did us any forfeit
Verb
(en verb)- He forfeited his last chance of an early release from jail by repeatedly attacking another inmate.
- Because only nine players were present, the football team was forced to forfeit the game.
- I will have the heart of him if he forfeit .
Usage notes
* Very rarely, forfeit is used as the past tense form and past participle (i.e., the past tense forms and the present tense form are homographs).Synonyms
* (lose a contest) capitulate, surrender * (voluntarily give up) forgo, withgoDerived terms
* forfeits * nonforfeited * nonforfeiting * nonforfeitureAdjective
(-)- thy wealth being forfeit to the state
- to tread the forfeit paradise
