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Hatchek vs Hatcheck - What's the difference?

hatchek | hatcheck |

As a proper noun hatchek

is .

As a noun hatcheck is

(us) a (l), in a (l) or other such (l), in which or hatcheck can be .

hatchek

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • * 1988 , Jost Wiedmann and Jürgen Kullmann [eds.], Cephalopods Present and Past: Symposium, Tübingen 1985 , page 20
  • The Bathmoceratidae are largely straight shells of Whiterock age, first known from the Šarka (pronounced Sharka from a hatchek over the Š).
  • * 1991 , Peter Hugh Reed, American Record Guide LIV:ii, page 69
  • The printer had no hatchek'…to put over Dvo?ak’s R. So somebody laboriously inked in all the ' hatcheks .
  • * 2001 , Felix K. Ameka, “Ideophones and the nature of the adjective word class in Ewe” in Typological Studies in Language'' XLIV: ''Ideophones , eds. Friedrich Karl Erhard Voeltz and Christa Kilian-Hatz, page 46, endnote 2
  • The hatchek marks a rising tone.
  • *
  • hatcheck

    English

    Etymology 1

    First attested in 1914–1915; formed as .

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (US) A (l), in a (l) or other such (l), in which .
  • * 1914–1915 , Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman (editors), Mother Earth Bulletin (Greenwood Reprint Corp.), series 1, volume 9, page 369
  • Admission 25 cents—Hatcheck 15 cents.
  • * 1919 , George Sylvester Viereck, Viereck’s (The Fatherland Corp.), volume 10, page 155
  • The following appeal in French and in English is handed out with the hatchecks in Henri’s Restaurant, Lynbrook, Long Island, of which Henri Charpentier is the amiable owner. Evidently this is not a restaurant to be patronized by persons who refuse to mix hate with their cocktails. It might, however, serve as headquarters for certain “friends” of German Democracy.
    Derived terms
    * (l)

    Etymology 2

    First attested in 1981; see .

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • * 1981 , , “In vain I tried to tell you”: Essays in Native American Ethnopoetics (2004), page 88, footnote 10
  • For certain consonants normally represented with other diacritics (superposed “hatcheck ,” subposed dot, bar) capitalization is used instead.
  • * 2006 , Ralph W. Fasold and Jeff Connor-Linton (editors), An Introduction to Language and Linguistics , pages 23–24
  • In other transcription systems…[?], [?], [t?], and [d?] are written with hatchecks : [š], [ž], [?], [?].
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