Bearing vs Gear - What's the difference?
bearing | gear |
Of a beam, column, or other device, carrying weight or load.
A mechanical device that supports another part and/or reduces friction.
(navigation, nautical) The horizontal angle between the direction of an object and another object, or between it and that of true north; a heading or direction.
Relevance; a relationship or connection.
* Alexander Pope
One's posture, demeanor, or manner.
* Shakespeare
(in the plural) Direction or relative position.
(architecture) That part of any member of a building which rests upon its supports.
(architecture) The portion of a support on which anything rests.
(architecture, proscribed) The unsupported span.
(heraldry) Any single emblem or charge in an escutcheon or coat of arms.
* Thackeray
(uncountable) equipment or paraphernalia, especially that used for an athletic endeavor.
Clothing; garments.
* Spenser
(obsolete) Goods; property; household items.
* Robynson (More's Utopia)
(countable) a wheel with grooves (teeth) engraved on the outer circumference, such that two such devices can interlock and convey motion from one to the other.
(countable) a particular combination or choice of interlocking gears, such that a particular gear ratio is achieved.
(countable) A configuration of the transmission of a motor car so as to achieve a particular ratio of engine to axle torque
(slang) recreational drugs
* 2003 , Marianne Hancock, Looking for Oliver (page 90)
(uncountable, archaic) stuff.
* 1662 , , Book III, A Collection of Several Philosophical Writings of Dr. Henry More, p. 113:
(obsolete) Business matters; affairs; concern.
* Spenser
(obsolete, UK, dialect) Anything worthless; nonsense; rubbish.
* Latimer
(engineering) To provide with gearing; to fit with gears in order to achieve a desired gear ratio.
(engineering) To be in, or come into, gear.
to dress; to put gear on; to harness.
As adjectives the difference between bearing and gear
is that bearing is of a beam, column, or other device, carrying weight or load while gear is (mostly British (Scouse)) great or fantastic.As nouns the difference between bearing and gear
is that bearing is a mechanical device that supports another part and/or reduces friction while gear is equipment or paraphernalia, especially that used for an athletic endeavor.As verbs the difference between bearing and gear
is that bearing is present participle of lang=en while gear is to provide with gearing; to fit with gears in order to achieve a desired gear ratio.bearing
English
Adjective
(-)- That's a bearing wall.
Derived terms
* -bearingNoun
(en noun)- That has no bearing on this issue.
- But of this frame, the bearings and the ties, / The strong connections, nice dependencies.
- She walks with a confident, self-assured bearing .
- I know him by his bearing .
- A lintel or beam may have four inches of bearing upon the wall.
- The beam has twenty feet of bearing between its supports.
- A carriage covered with armorial bearings .
Derived terms
(terms derived from bearing) * ball bearing * find one’s bearings * get one’s bearings * inline bearing * inline hockey bearing * inline skate bearing, in-line skate bearing * magnetic bearing * lose one’s bearings * quad roller skate bearing * roller bearing * rollerblade bearing * skate bearing * skateboard bearing * true bearingSee also
* ABECVerb
(head)Anagrams
* *gear
English
Noun
(wikipedia gear)- Array thyself in thy most gorgeous gear .
- (Chaucer)
- Homely gear and common ware.
- Have you got any gear ? Dominic, have you got any acid?
- "When he was digged up, which was in the presence of the Magistracy of the Town, his body was found entire, not at all putrid, no ill smell about him, saving the mustiness of the grave-Clothes, his joynts limber and flexible, as in those that are alive, his skin only flaccid, but a more fresh grown in the room of it, the wound of his throat gaping, but no gear nor corruption in it; there was also observed a Magical mark in the great toe of his right foot, viz. an Excrescency in the form of a Rose."
- Thus go they both together to their gear .
- (Wright)
- That servant of his that confessed and uttered this gear was an honest man.