Gap vs Lap - What's the difference?
gap | lap |
An opening in anything made by breaking or parting.
An opening allowing passage or entrance.
An opening that implies a breach or defect.
A vacant space or time.
A hiatus.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-03, volume=408, issue=8847, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= A mountain or hill pass.
(label) A sheltered area of coast between two cliffs (mostly restricted to place names).
(label) The regions between the outfielders.
The shortfall between the amount the medical insurer will pay to the service provider and the scheduled fee for the item.
* 2008 , Eileen Willis, Louise Reynolds, Helen Keleher, Understanding the Australian Health Care System ,
* {{quote-news, year=2012, date=May 13, author=Andrew Benson, work=BBC Sport
, title=
* {{quote-book, year=1995, author=Robert E. Knoll, chapter=A University on the Defensive 1920-1927
, title= (label) (usually written as "the gap") The disparity between the indigenous and non-indigenous communities with regard to life expectancy, education, health, etc.
(label) To notch, as a sword or knife.
(label) To make an opening in; to breach.
(label) To check the size of a gap.
The loose part of a coat; the lower part of a garment that plays loosely; a skirt; an apron.
An edge; a border; a hem, as of cloth.
The part of the clothing that lies on the knees or thighs when one sits down; that part of the person thus covered; figuratively, a place of rearing and fostering; as, to be reared in the lap of luxury.
The upper legs of a seated person.
(archaic, euphemistic) The female pudenda.
(construction) component that overlaps or covers any portion of the same or adjacent component.
To enfold; to hold as in one's lap; to cherish.
* Dryden
To rest or recline in a lap, or as in a lap.
* Praed
To fold; to bend and lay over or on something.
to wrap around, enwrap, wrap up
* Isaac Newton
to envelop, enfold
to wind around
To place or lay (one thing) so as to overlap another.
To polish, e.g., a surface, until smooth.
To be turned or folded; to lie partly on or over something; to overlap.
* Grew
To overtake a straggler in a race by completing one more whole lap than the straggler.
To cut or polish with a lap, as glass, gems, cutlery, etc.
The act or process of lapping.
That part of any substance or fixture which extends over, or lies upon, or by the side of, a part of another; as, the lap of a board; also, the measure of such extension over or upon another thing.
The amount by which a slide valve at its half stroke overlaps a port in the seat, being equal to the distance the valve must move from its mid stroke position in order to begin to open the port. Used alone, lap refers to outside lap. See Outside lap (below).
The state or condition of being in part extended over or by the side of something else; or the extent of the overlapping; as, the second boat got a lap of half its length on the leader.
(sports) One circuit around a race track, or one traversal down and then back the length of a pool; as, to run twenty laps; to win by three laps, to swim two laps.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=May 13
, author=Andrew Benson
, title=Williams's Pastor Maldonado takes landmark Spanish Grand Prix win
, work=BBC Sport
In card playing and other games, the points won in excess of the number necessary to complete a game; — so called when they are counted in the score of the following game.
A sheet, layer, or bat, of cotton fiber prepared for the carding machine.
A piece of brass, lead, or other soft metal, used to hold a cutting or polishing powder in cutting glass, gems, and the like, or in polishing cutlery, etc. It is usually in the form of wheel or disk, which revolves on a vertical axis.
(ambitransitive) To take (liquid) into the mouth with the tongue; to lick up with a quick motion of the tongue.
* Shakespeare
* Sir K. Digby
(of water) To wash against a surface with a splashing sound; to swash.
* Tennyson
In transitive terms the difference between gap and lap
is that gap is to check the size of a gap while lap is to overtake a straggler in a race by completing one more whole lap than the straggler.gap
English
Noun
(en noun)The machine of a new soul, passage=The yawning gap in neuroscientists’ understanding of their topic is in the intermediate scale of the brain’s anatomy. Science has a passable knowledge of how individual nerve cells, known as neurons, work. It also knows which visible lobes and ganglia of the brain do what. But how the neurons are organised in these lobes and ganglia remains obscure. Yet this is the level of organisation that does the actual thinking—and is, presumably, the seat of consciousness.}}
page 5,
- Under bulk billing the patient does not pay a gap , and the medical practitioner receives 85% of the scheduled fee.
Williams's Pastor Maldonado takes landmark Spanish Grand Prix win, passage=That left Maldonado with a 6.2-second lead. Alonso closed in throughout their third stints, getting the gap down to 4.2secs before Maldonado stopped for the final time on lap 41.}}
Prairie University: A History of the University of Nebraska, page=70 , passage=When Charles Bessey suddenly died in 1916 at age seventy, he left a gap that was impossible to fill; and though his protégé. R. J. Pool, was a man of intelligence and character, he did not have Bessey’s authority.}}
Synonyms
* (opening made by breaking or parting) break, hole, rip, split, tear, rift, chasm, fissure * (opening allowing passage or entrance) break, clearing, hole, opening * (opening that implies a breach or defect) space * (vacant space or time) window * (hiatus) hiatus * (mountain pass) col, neck, pass * (in baseball)Derived terms
* gap-toothed * gap yearVerb
(gapp)Anagrams
* * * ----lap
English
Etymology 1
Old English '' (skirt or flap of a garment), from (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- The boy was sitting on his mother's lap
Derived terms
* lapdance, lap-dance, lap dance * lapdog * lapmark * laptopVerb
(lapp)- Her garment spreads, and laps him in the folds.
- to lap his head on lady's breast
Etymology 2
From (etyl) , (etyl) dial. vravle'' "to wind", (etyl) ''goluppare "to wrap, fold up" (from (etyl)). More at envelop, develop The sense of "to get a lap ahead (of someone) on a track" is from 1847, on notion of "overlapping." The noun meaning "a turn around a track" (1861) is from this sense.Verb
(lapp)- to lap a piece of cloth
- to lap a bandage around a finger
- About the paper I lapped several times a slender thread of very black silk.
- lapped in luxury
- One laps roof tiles so that water can run off.
- The cloth laps''' back; the boats '''lap'''; the edges '''lap .
- The upper wings are opacous; at their hinder ends, where they lap over, transparent, like the wing of a fly.
Derived terms
* lapperNoun
(en noun)citation, page= , passage=Alonso's second place moves him into a tie on points at the head of the championship with Sebastian Vettel, who was sixth in his Red Bull, passing Button, then Hamilton and finally Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg in quick succession in the closing laps .}}
Derived terms
* lap of honor/lap of honourEtymology 3
From (etyl) lapian'', from (etyl) .Verb
(lapp)- They'll take suggestion as a cat laps milk.
- The dogs by the River Nilus's side, being thirsty, lap hastily as they run along the shore.
- I heard the ripple washing in the reeds, / And the wild water lapping on the crag.
