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Lanch vs Blanch - What's the difference?

lanch | blanch |

As verbs the difference between lanch and blanch

is that lanch is to throw, as a lance; to let fly; to launch while blanch is to grow or become white.

As a noun lanch

is a large bed of flints.

As a proper noun Blanch is

{{given name|female|from=French}}, a less common spelling of Blanche.

lanch

English

Noun

  • (UK, dialect) A large bed of flints.
  • * 1871 (Thomas Hardy) "Desperate Remedies"
  • ...difficult to cultivate, on account of the outcrop thereon of a large bed of flints
    called locally a ' lanch ' or 'lanchet.'

    Verb

    (es)
  • (obsolete) To throw, as a lance; to let fly; to launch.
  • blanch

    English

    Etymology 1

    From (etyl) blanchir

    Verb

    (es)
  • To grow or become white
  • his cheek blanched with fear
    the rose blanches in the sun
  • To take the color out of, and make white; to bleach
  • to blanch linen
    age has blanched his hair
  • (cooking) To cook by dipping briefly into boiling water, then directly into cold water.
  • To whiten, as the surface of meat, by plunging into boiling water and afterwards into cold, so as to harden the surface and retain the juices
  • To bleach by excluding the light, as the stalks or leaves of plants, by earthing them up or tying them together
  • To make white by removing the skin of, as by scalding
  • to blanch almonds
  • To give a white luster to (silver, before stamping, in the process of coining)
  • To cover (sheet iron) with a coating of tin.
  • (figuratively) To whiten; to give a favorable appearance to; to whitewash; to palliate
  • * Tillotson
  • Blanch over the blackest and most absurd things.

    Etymology 2

    Variant of blench

    Verb

    (es)
  • To avoid, as from fear; to evade; to leave unnoticed.
  • * Francis Bacon
  • Ifs and ands to qualify the words of treason, whereby every man might express his malice and blanch his danger.
  • * Reliq. Wot
  • I suppose you will not blanch Paris in your way.
  • To cause to turn aside or back.
  • to blanch a deer
  • To use evasion.
  • * Francis Bacon
  • Books will speak plain, when counsellors blanch .
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