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Hedge vs Hinge - What's the difference?

hedge | hinge |

In transitive terms the difference between hedge and hinge

is that hedge is to obstruct with a hedge or hedges while hinge is archaeology The breaking off of the distal end of a knapped stone flake whose presumed course across the face of the stone core was truncated prematurely, leaving not a feathered distal end but instead the scar of a nearly perpendicular break.

In intransitive terms the difference between hedge and hinge

is that hedge is to construct or repair a hedge while hinge is to depend on something.

hedge

English

Noun

(wikipedia hedge) (en noun)
  • A thicket of bushes, usually thorn bushes; especially, such a thicket planted as a fence between any two portions of land; and also any sort of shrubbery, as evergreens, planted in a line or as a fence; particularly, such a thicket planted round a field to fence it, or in rows to separate the parts of a garden.
  • :
  • *
  • *:But then I had the [massive] flintlock by me for protection. ΒΆ, and a 'bead' could be drawn upon Molly, the dairymaid, kissing the fogger behind the hedge , little dreaming that the deadly tube was levelled at them.
  • A mound of earth, stone- or turf-faced, often topped with bushes, used as a fence between any two portions of land.
  • A non-committal or intentionally ambiguous statement.
  • (lb) Contract or arrangement reducing one's exposure to risk (for example the risk of price movements or interest rate movements).
  • :
  • :
  • Used attributively, with figurative indication of a person's upbringing, or professional activities, taking place by the side of the road; third-rate.
  • *, II.2:
  • *:Attalus made him so dead-drunke that insensibly and without feeling he might prostitute his beauty as the body of a common hedge -harlot, to Mulettiers, Groomes and many of the abject servants of his house.
  • *1749 , (Henry Fielding), , Folio Society 1973, p.639:
  • *:He then traced them from place to place, till at last he found two of them drinking together, with a third person, at a hedge -tavern near Aldersgate.
  • *{{quote-book, 1899, (Henry Rider Haggard), title= A Farmer's Year: Being His Commonplace Book for 1898, page=222
  • , passage=This particular wheelwright is only a hedge carpenter, without even a shop of his own,

    Derived terms

    * hedge fund * hedgehog * hedgerow * hedgy

    Verb

    (hedg)
  • To enclose with a hedge or hedges.
  • to hedge a field or garden
  • To obstruct with a hedge or hedges.
  • * Bible, Hos. ii. 6
  • I will hedge up thy way with thorns.
  • * Milton
  • Lollius Urbius to hedge out incursions from the north.
  • (finance) To offset the risk associated with.
  • To avoid verbal commitment.
  • He carefully hedged his statements with weasel words.
  • To construct or repair a hedge.
  • (finance) To reduce one's exposure to risk.
  • Derived terms

    * hedge one's bets * hedgy

    hinge

    English

    (wikipedia hinge)

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A jointed or flexible device that allows the pivoting of a door etc. See also pintel.
  • A stamp hinge, a folded and gummed paper rectangle for affixing postage stamps in an album.
  • A principle, or a point in time, on which subsequent reasonings or events depend.
  • This argument was the hinge on which the question turned.
  • (statistics) The median of the upper or lower half of a batch, sample, or probability distribution.
  • One of the four cardinal points, east, west, north, or south.
  • * Creech
  • When the moon is in the hinge at East.
  • * Milton
  • Nor slept the winds / Within their stony caves, but rush'd abroad / From the four hinges of the world.

    Synonyms

    * (device upon which a door hangs) har * (statistics) quartile

    Derived terms

    * hinge line, hingeline * hinge termination * lower hinge * midhinge * rehinge * upper hinge * hingeable

    Verb

  • To attach by, or equip with a hinge.
  • To depend on something.
  • archaeology The breaking off of the distal end of a knapped stone flake whose presumed course across the face of the stone core was truncated prematurely, leaving not a feathered distal end but instead the scar of a nearly perpendicular break.
  • The flake hinged at an inclusion in the core.
  • (obsolete) To bend.
  • (Shakespeare)

    Anagrams

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