What's the difference between
and
Enter two words to compare and contrast their definitions, origins, and synonyms to better understand how those words are related.

Etch vs Ingrave - What's the difference?

etch | ingrave |

As verbs the difference between etch and ingrave

is that etch is to cut into a surface with an acid or other corrosive substance in order to make a pattern. Best known as a technique for creating printing plates, but also used for decoration on metal, and, in modern industry, to make circuit boards while ingrave is obsolete form of lang=en.

As a noun etch

is obsolete form of lang=en.

etch

English

Etymology 1

Germanic, cognate with Dutch ets .

Verb

  • To cut into a surface with an acid or other corrosive substance in order to make a pattern. Best known as a technique for creating printing plates, but also used for decoration on metal, and, in modern industry, to make circuit boards.
  • To engrave a surface.
  • (figuratively) To make a lasting impression.
  • The memory of 9/11 is etched into my mind.
  • To sketch; to delineate.
  • * John Locke
  • There are many empty terms to be found in some learned writers, to which they had recourse to etch out their system.

    Etymology 2

    Noun

  • (Mortimer)

    Anagrams

    * *

    ingrave

    English

    Verb

    (ingrav)
  • (Tennyson)
  • * 1747', William Faithorne, ''Sculptura Historico-technica: Or the History and Art of '''Ingraving (etc.) , page 11,
  • .
  • * 1840 , Bejamin Barnard, William Henry Black, Illustrations of Ancient State and Chivalry from Manuscripts Preserved in the Ashmolean Museum , footnote, page 93,
  • Even in Ashmole's plate of the feast of Saint George, in the Hall at Windsor, (ingraved by Hollar,) the Knights may be seen, feeding themselves with their fingers : one only appears to be using a fork or spoon.
  • * 1991 , ], page 91,
  • This work, with its border decorations ingraved with festoons of fruit and animals all cast in metal, cost twenty-two thousand florins, while the bronze doors themselves weighed thirty-four thousand pounds.
  • (obsolete) To bury.
  • (Heywood)
    (Webster 1913) ----