What's the difference between
and
Enter two words to compare and contrast their definitions, origins, and synonyms to better understand how those words are related.

What is the difference between mirage and rainbow?

mirage | rainbow |

In transitive terms the difference between mirage and rainbow

is that mirage is to cause to appear as or like a mirage while rainbow is to pattern with many colours, like a rainbow.

As an adjective rainbow is

multicoloured.

mirage

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • An optical phenomenon in which light is refracted through a layer of hot air close to the ground, giving the appearance of there being refuge in the distance.
  • (figuratively) An illusion.
  • See also

    * (Mirage) * fata morgana * illusion * optical illusion

    Verb

    (mirag)
  • To cause to appear as or like a mirage.
  • * {{quote-book, year=1915, author=E. Phillips Oppenheim, title=Mr. Grex of Monte Carlo, chapter=, edition= citation
  • , passage=All that had been in his mind seemed suddenly miraged before him—the removal of Hunterleys, his own wife's failing health. }}
  • * {{quote-book, year=1901, author=A. E. W. Mason, title=Ensign Knightley and Other Stories, chapter=, edition= citation
  • , passage=The vision of a salon was miraged before her, with herself in the middle deftly manipulating the destinies of a nation. }}

    Anagrams

    * ----

    rainbow

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A multicoloured arch in the sky, produced by prismatic refraction of light within droplets of rain in the air.
  • Any prismatic refraction of light showing a spectrum of colours.
  • A wide assortment; a varied multitude.
  • ''a rainbow of possibilities
  • (label) An illusion, mirage.
  • ''Many electoral promises are rainbows , vanishing soon after poll day.
  • (baseball) A curveball, particularly a slow one.
  • (poker slang) In Texas hold 'em or Omaha hold 'em, a flop that contains three different suits.
  • Quotations

    * 1911 , Francis R. Steel, Catching the Rainbow Trout'', in ''The Outing Magazine , volume 58, page 482: *: Finally, by actual trial, I have found that I can catch more rainbow by using one fly than with a two or three-fly cast. * 1994 , John Simon, Of Dogs, Their Masters, and Others'', in ''New York magazine, September 5 1994, page 51: *: That Asian-American actor Thomas Ikeda contributes a pleasingly frantic Panthino would not be considered rainbow enough.

    Synonyms

    * (prismatic reflection) spectrum

    Derived terms

    * chase rainbows * end of the rainbow * lunar rainbow * marine rainbow * rainbow coalition * rainbow fish * rainbow perch * rainbow runner * rainbow trout * rainbow wrasse * somewhere over the rainbow * supernumerary rainbow

    Adjective

    (-)
  • Multicoloured.
  • (attributive, chiefly, US) Made up of several races or ethnicities, or (more broadly) of several cultural or ideological factions.
  • * 2006 , Anthony Summers, Robbyn Swan, Sinatra: The Life , page 246:
  • He went along with them because the Pack was a rainbow group — two Italian-Americans, a black man, a Jew (Bishop), and a sometime Englishman (Lawford) — and they were making a point.
  • * 2007 , Melissa Haussman, Birgit Sauer, Gendering the state in the age of globalization , page 67:
  • The 1999 June elections led to a surprise change in the governing coalition from the long-term ruling Christian Democrats to a rainbow group of Greens, Liberals, and Socialists.
  • * 2007 , Hooson, in a Letter to the Western Mail, 19 June 2007, published in Crossing the Rubicon: coalition politics Welsh style by John Osmond, page 28:
  • [...] it seemed to me to be naive indeed for the Liberal Democrats to believe that they could simply enter into a rainbow alliance against the Labour Government.
  • * 2008 , Bidyut Chakrabarty, Indian politics and society since independence , page 76:
  • Mayawati has succeeded in building a social coalition that inverts the pyramid of caste/class hierarchy by building a rainbow alliance of social groups, now dominated by that greatest underclass of all, namely Dalits.
  • (attributive) LGBT.
  • * 2005 , Alan McKee, The public sphere: an introduction , page 167:
  • Similarly, the question of who belongs in such a rainbow alliance isn't set. It can include gay men, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender individuals. It can include people who are 'questioning' which culture they belong to [...]
  • (poker, chiefly, of a flop) Composed]] entirely of different [[suit#Noun, suits.
  • Usage notes

    In the United States, 'rainbow' groups/families/alliances/coalitions were originally those made up of several races or ethnicities. The term is now used more broadly, to refer (in the 2007 quotation, for example) to an alliance of several political parties.

    References

    * Weisenberg, Michael (2000) The Official Dictionary of Poker. MGI/Mike Caro University. ISBN 978-1880069523

    Verb

    (en verb)
  • To pattern with many colours, like a rainbow.