Leaves vs Leaven - What's the difference?
leaves | leaven |
(leave)
Any agent used to make dough rise or to have a similar effect on baked goods.
(figurative) Anything that makes a general assimilating (especially a corrupting) change in the mass.
* Bible, Luke xii. 1
To add a leavening agent.
To cause to rise by fermentation.
(figuratively) To temper an action or decision.
*
To imbue; to infect; to vitiate.
* Milton
As nouns the difference between leaves and leaven
is that leaves is or leaves can be while leaven is any agent used to make dough rise or to have a similar effect on baked goods.As verbs the difference between leaves and leaven
is that leaves is (leave) while leaven is to add a leavening agent.leaves
English
Etymology 1
Noun
(head)Etymology 2
Noun
(head)Etymology 3
Verb
(head)Statistics
* English terms with multiple etymologiesleaven
English
Noun
(en noun)- Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.
Derived terms
* leavenless * natural leavenVerb
(en verb)- With fresh material, taxonomic conclusions are leavened by recognition that the material examined reflects the site it occupied; a herbarium packet gives one only a small fraction of the data desirable for sound conclusions. Herbarium material does not, indeed, allow one to extrapolate safely: what you see is what you get
- With these and the like deceivable doctrines, he leavens also his prayer.