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Glib vs Monotone - What's the difference?

glib | monotone |

As adjectives the difference between glib and monotone

is that glib is having a ready flow of words but lacking thought or understanding; superficial; shallow while monotone is (of speech or a sound) having a single unvaried pitch.

As verbs the difference between glib and monotone

is that glib is to make glib or glib can be (obsolete) to castrate; to geld; to emasculate while monotone is (ambitransitive) to speak in a monotone.

As nouns the difference between glib and monotone

is that glib is (historical) a mass of matted hair worn down over the eyes, formerly worn in ireland while monotone is a single unvaried tone of speech or a sound.

glib

English

Etymology 1

Probably modification of Low German glibberig'' (slippery) or a shortening of English ''glibbery (slippery).

Adjective

(glibber)
  • Having a ready flow of words but lacking thought or understanding; superficial; shallow.
  • Smooth or slippery.
  • a sheet of glib ice
  • Artfully persuasive in nature.
  • a glib''' tongue; a '''glib speech
  • * Shakespeare
  • I want that glib and oily art, / To speak and purpose not.
    Derived terms
    * glibly * glibness

    Verb

    (glibb)
  • To make glib.
  • (Bishop Hall)

    Etymology 2

    From (etyl) glib.

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (historical) A mass of matted hair worn down over the eyes, formerly worn in Ireland.
  • *1596 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , IV.8:
  • *:Whom when she saw in wretched weedes disguiz'd, / With heary glib deform'd and meiger face, / Like ghost late risen from his grave agryz'd, / She knew him not […].
  • * Spenser
  • The Irish have, from the Scythians, mantles and long glibs , which is a thick curled bush of hair hanging down over their eyes, and monstrously disguising them.
  • * Southey
  • Their wild costume of the glib and mantle.

    Etymology 3

    Compare Old English and dialect (lib) to castrate, geld, Danish dialect (live), Low German and Old Dutch lubben.

    Verb

    (glibb)
  • (obsolete) To castrate; to geld; to emasculate.
  • * 1623 : , Act II Scene 1
  • Fourteen they shall not see
    To bring false generations. They are co-heirs;
    And I had rather glib myself than they
    Should not produce fair issue.
    (Webster 1913) ---- ==Serbo-Croatian==

    Noun

  • mud, mire
  • Declension

    {{sh-decl-noun , gl?b, glíbovi , gliba, glibova , glibu, glibovima , glib, glibove , glibe, glibovi , glibu, glibovima , glibom, glibovima }}

    monotone

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (of speech or a sound) having a single unvaried pitch
  • * 1940 , Asiatic Society (Calcutta, Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal, India), Journal of the Asiatic Society , page 95:
  • The prominence of the syllables is more monotone than in English, the intonation of the latter having a larger variation of stressed and unstressed syllables.
  • * 1998 , Roger W. Shuy, Bureaucratic Language in Government and Business'', Georgetown University Press, ''Research on Telephone vs. In-Person Administrative Hearings , page 76:
  • In the formal register, such variation is reduced and the talk has a more monotone , business-like quality.
  • (mathematics) property of a function to be either always decreasing or always increasing
  • * The function f(x):=x^3 is monotone while g(x):=x^2 is not.
  • Noun

    (en noun)
  • A single unvaried tone of speech or a sound
  • When Tima felt like her parents were treating her like a servant, she would speak in monotone and act as though she were a robot.
  • * 1799 , John Walker, Elements of Elocution , Cooper and Wilson, page 309:
  • It is no very difficult matter to be loud in a high tone of voice; but to be loud and forcible in a low tone, requires great practice and management; this, however, may be facilitated by pronouncing forcibly at fir?t in a low monotone'; a ' monotone , though in a low key, and without force, is much more ?onorous and audible than when the voice ?lides up and down at almo?t every word, as it mu?t do to be various.

    Derived terms

    * monotonic * monotonous * monotony

    Verb

    (monoton)
  • (ambitransitive) To speak in a monotone.
  • ----