Climb vs Mantle - What's the difference?
climb | mantle |
To ascend; rise; to go up.
* Dryden
To mount; to move upwards on.
To scale; to get to the top of something.
* {{quote-news, year=2010, date=May 22, author=David Harrison
, title=American boy, 13, is youngest person to climb Everest
, work=Daily Telegraph online
To move (especially up and down something) by gripping with the hands and using the feet.
* 1900 , (James Frazer), (The Golden Bough) Chapter 65
* 1900 , , ''(The Wonderful Wizard of Oz)
* 2008 , Tony Atkins, Dragonhawk - the Turning
to practise the sport of climbing
to jump high
* {{quote-news, year=2010, date=December 28
, author=Paul Fletcher, title=Man City 4 - 0 Aston Villa, work=BBC
* {{quote-news, year=2008, date=September 13
, title=Ospreys Glasgow Magners League, work=South Wales Evening Post
* {{quote-news, year=2001, date=December 29, author=Derick Allsop
, title=Bolton's nine men hit back to steal a point, work=Daily Telegraph online
To move to a higher position on the social ladder.
(botany) Of plants, to grow upwards by clinging to something.
An act of climbing.
* 2007 , Nigel Shepherd, Complete Guide to Rope Techniques
The act of getting to somewhere more elevated.
* 2012 , July 15. Richard Williams in Guardian Unlimited,
* 1999 , B. Keith Jones, The Roomie Do Me Blues
An upwards struggle
* {{quote-news
, year=1998
, date=September 30
, author=AP
, title=Worst May Lie Ahead For Asia, Report Warns
, work=Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
A piece of clothing somewhat like an open robe or cloak, especially that worn by Orthodox bishops.
(figuratively) A figurative garment representing authority or status, capable of affording protection.
(figuratively) Anything that covers or conceals something else; a cloak.
* (rfdate) (Shakespeare) (King Lear)
(zoology) The body wall of a mollusc, from which the shell is secreted.
* 1990 , Daniel L. Gilbert, William J. Adelman, John M. Arnold (editors), Squid as Experimental Animals , page 71 (where there is an illustration):
(zoology) The back of a bird together with the folded wings.
The zone of hot gases around a flame; the gauzy incandescent covering of a gas lamp.
The outer wall and casing of a blast furnace, above the hearth.
A penstock for a water wheel.
(anatomy) The cerebral cortex.
(geology) The layer between the Earth's core and crust.
A fireplace shelf;
(heraldry) A mantling.
To cover or conceal (something); to cloak; to disguise.
To become covered or concealed.
(of face, cheeks) To flush.
* 1913 ,
As a verb climb
is to ascend; rise; to go up.As a noun climb
is an act of climbing.As a proper noun mantle is
.climb
English
Verb
- Prices climbed steeply.
- Black vapours climb aloft, and cloud the day.
- They climbed the mountain.
- Climbing a tree
citation, page= , passage=He is a curly-haired schoolboy barely in his teens, but 13-year-old Jordan Romero from California has become the youngest person to climb Mount Everest.}}
- A priest clad in a white robe climbs the tree and with a golden sickle cuts the mistletoe, which is caught in a white cloth.
- She thought she must have been mistaken at first, for none of the scarecrows in Kansas ever wink; but presently the figure nodded its head to her in a friendly way. Then she climbed down from the fence and walked up to it, while Toto ran around the pole and barked.
- Cutter and Bolan climbed around the furniture and piled into the back of the truck.
citation, page= , passage=The defender climbed majestically at the near post to convert Johnson's corner. }}
citation, page= , passage=As the game moved towards injury time, the Ospreys forced a line-out which Jonathan Thomas climbed high to take.}}
citation, page= , passage=Four minutes of stoppage time were virtually up when Ricketts climbed to head in the equaliser from substitute Nicky Southall's centre.}}
Usage notes
In the past, the forms clomb'' and ''clumb were encountered as simple past and past participle forms; these forms are now archaic or dialectical.Derived terms
* climb down * climb down someone's throat * climb up * climb the ladder * climb the walls * climber * declimb * have a mountain to climb * unclimbedSynonyms
(get to the top of) * scaleNoun
(wikipedia climb) (en noun)- Make sure that you keep checking to see that everything remains safe throughout the climb .
Tour de France 2012: Carpet tacks cannot force Bradley Wiggins off track
- The Mur de Péguère is a savage little climb , its last four kilometres a narrow tunnel of trees and excited spectators urging on the straining riders.
- I guess the room wasn't so bad, except for the climb to get there. The stairs were destined to be a serious health hazard.
citation, page= , passage=After a decade of prosperity, millions of Asians are likely to be pushed into poverty, and the climb out of poverty will stall for millions of others}}
Derived terms
* rate of climbmantle
English
(wikipedia mantle)Noun
(en noun)- At the meeting, she finally assumed the mantle of leadership of the party.
- The movement strove to put women under the protective mantle of civil rights laws.
- the green mantle of the standing pool
- Before copulation in Loligo'', the male swims beside and slightly below about his potential mate and flashes his chromatophores. He grasps the female from slightly below about the mid-mantle region and positions himself so his arms are close to the opening of her mantle'''. He then reaches into his ' mantle with his hectocotylus and picks up several spermatophores from his penis.
- (Raymond)
Derived terms
* assume the mantle * gas mantle * mantlepiece * mantle-tree * upper mantleVerb
(mantl)- (Shakespeare)
- The blood still mantled below her ears; she bent her head in shame of her humility.