Jut vs Pouch - What's the difference?
jut | pouch |
something that sticks out
* 1999 , Stardust , , page 3 (2001 Perennial Edition).
to stick out
* Sir Thomas Browne
* {{quote-book
, year=1997
, author=(Don DeLillo)
, chapter=1
, title=Underworld
, passage=...enormous Chesterfield packs aslant on the scoreboards, a couple of cigarettes jutting from each.}}
(obsolete) To butt.
* Mason
A small bag usually closed with a drawstring.
A pocket in which a marsupial carries its young.
Any pocket or bag-shaped object, such as a cheek pouch.
(slang, dated, derogatory) A protuberant belly; a paunch.
A cyst or sac containing fluid.
(botany) A silicle, or short pod, as of the shepherd's purse.
A bulkhead in the hold of a vessel, to prevent grain etc. from shifting.
To enclose within a pouch.
To transport within a pouch, especially a diplomatic pouch.
(of fowls and fish) To swallow.
* '>citation
* '>citation
(obsolete) To pout.
(obsolete) To pocket; to put up with.
In obsolete terms the difference between jut and pouch
is that jut is to butt while pouch is to pocket; to put up with.As nouns the difference between jut and pouch
is that jut is something that sticks out while pouch is a small bag usually closed with a drawstring.As verbs the difference between jut and pouch
is that jut is to stick out while pouch is to enclose within a pouch.jut
English
Noun
(en noun)- The town of Wall stands today as it has stood for six hundred years, on a high jut of granite amidst a small forest woodland.
Verb
(jutt)- the jutting part of a building
- It seems to jut out of the structure of the poem.
- the jutting steer
pouch
English
Noun
(es)Synonyms
* (l)See also
* bag * pocket * sackVerb
- (Ainsworth)
- (Sir Walter Scott)