Loamed vs Loaded - What's the difference?
loamed | loaded |
(loam)
A type of soil; an earthy mixture of sand, silt and clay, with organic matter to which its fertility is chiefly due.
* 1602 : , act V scene 1
(metalworking) A mixture of sand, clay, and other materials, used in making moulds for large castings, often without a pattern.
(load)
Burdened by some heavy load; packed.
* 1737 , The Gentleman's Magazine , Volume 7,
* 1812 , Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal , Volume 8,
* 1888 , , XIII: Theoretical writings on Architecture,
* 1913 , ,
* 2011 , Matt Rogan, Martin Rogan, Britain and the Olympic Games: Past, Present, Legacy ,
(of a projectile weapon) Having a live round of ammunition in the chamber; armed.
(slang) Possessing great wealth.
(slang) Drunk.
(baseball) Pertaining to a situation where there is a runner at each of the three bases.
(gaming, of a die or dice, also used figuratively) Weighted asymmetrically, and so biased to produce predictable throws.
* 1996 , Elaine Creith, Undressing Lesbian Sex ,
* 1997 , , Slovo: The Unfinished Autobiography ,
* 2009 , Michèle Lowrie, Horace: Odes and Epodes ,
(of a question) Designed to produce a predictable answer, or to lay a trap.
(of a word or phrase) Having strong connotations that colour the literal meaning and are likely to provoke an emotional response. Sometimes used loosely to describe a word that simply has many different meanings.
* 2993 , L. Susan Bond, Contemporary African American Preaching: Diversity in Theory and Style ,
Equipped with numerous options; deluxe.
As verbs the difference between loamed and loaded
is that loamed is (loam) while loaded is (load).As an adjective loaded is
burdened by some heavy load; packed.loamed
English
Verb
(head)loam
English
(wikipedia loam)Noun
- Alexander died, Alexander was buried, Alexander
- returneth to dust, the dust is earth, of earth we make
- loam', and of why that ' loam whereto he was converted
- might they not stop a beer-barrel?
Anagrams
*loaded
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)- Let's leave the TV; the car is loaded already.
page 780,
- With regard to France'' and ''Holland , therefore, I mu?t think, Sir, and it has always been the general Opinion, that the Subjects of each are more loaded and more oppre??ed with Taxes and Exci?es than the People of this Kingdom ;
page 118,
- .
- and for that reason the arches of the vaults of any apse should never be more loaded than the arches of the principal building.
- What is known concerning supernatural matters is a sort of common deposit, guarded by everybody, and handed down without any intervention on the part of an authority; fuller in one place, scantier in another, or, again, more loaded with external symbols according to the intelligence, the temperament, the organization, the habits, and the manner of the people's life.
page 15,
- What had traditionally been a morally neutral sport became loaded with a set of Victorian values.
- No funny business; this heater's loaded !
- He sold his business a couple of years ago and is just loaded .
- By the end of the evening, the guests in the club were really loaded .
- It's bottom of the ninth, the bases are loaded and there are two outs.
- He was playing with loaded dice and won a fortune.
page 49,
- The more we invest in a sexual encounter in a particular person, the more loaded the dice in a dating game that we are forever reminded we must play to win.
page 80,
- If you add to this the fact that the magistrate and the police sergeant are close friends, then the dice could not have been more loaded against my client.
page 224,
- Horace has been crippled by being set off against the 'sincerity' and 'spontaneity' of these two; when it comes to the Greek lyricists, the dice are even more loaded against our poet, for the Greeks have not only spontaneity and sincerity on their side, but a phalanx of yet more formidable allies .
- That interviewer is tricky; he asks loaded questions.
- "Ignorant" is a loaded word, often implying lack of intelligence rather than just lack of knowledge.
page 30,
- The more loaded phrase is the middle one, "she slit his gullet," since it captures a sense of crudeness and suddenness that the other two do not.
- She went all out; her new car is loaded .