Hatchet vs Hatchek - What's the difference?
hatchet | hatchek |
A small light axe with a short handle; a tomahawk.
* Longfellow
To cut with a hatchet.
* 1988 , Jost Wiedmann and Jürgen Kullmann [eds.], Cephalopods Present and Past: Symposium, Tübingen 1985 ,
* 1991 , Peter Hugh Reed, American Record Guide LIV:ii,
* 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,
*
As nouns the difference between hatchet and hatchek
is that hatchet is a small light axe with a short handle; a tomahawk while hatchek is rare spelling of háček|lang=en.As a verb hatchet
is to cut with a hatchet.As a proper noun Hatchek is
{{surname}.hatchet
English
Noun
(en noun)- Buried was the bloody hatchet .
Derived terms
* bury the hatchet * hatchetation * hatchet-faced * hatchet job * hatchet manVerb
hatchek
English
Noun
(en noun)page 20
- The Bathmoceratidae are largely straight shells of Whiterock age, first known from the Šarka (pronounced Sharka from a hatchek over the Š).
page 69
- The printer had no hatchek'…to put over Dvo?ak’s R. So somebody laboriously inked in all the ' hatcheks .
page 46, endnote 2
- The hatchek marks a rising tone.
