Moon vs Luna - What's the difference?
moon | luna |
The largest satellite of Earth.
Any natural satellite of a planet.
(literary) A month, particularly a lunar month.
* {{quote-book
, year=1737
, author=John Brickell
, title=The natural history of North-Carolina
, page=308-309
, passage=The number their age by Moons' or Winters, and say a Woman or a Man is so many '''Moons''' old, and so they do with all memorable Actions in life, accounting it to be so many '''Moons or Winters since such or such a thing happened. ''Note: in earlier modern English, many nouns were capitalized, similar to present day German. }}
* {{quote-book
, year=1822
, author=Thomas Love Peacock
, title=Maid Marian
, page=238
, passage=Many moons had waxed and waned when on the afternoon of a lovely summer day a lusty broad-boned knight was riding through the forest of Sherwood.}}
A crescent-like outwork in a fortification.
(colloquial) To display one's buttocks to, typically as a jest, insult, or protest
(colloquial) (usually followed by'' over''' ''or'' ' after ) To fuss over something adoringly; to be infatuated with someone.
To spend time idly, absent-mindedly.
* 1898 , Joseph Conrad,
To expose to the rays of the Moon.
* Holland
(entomology) A luna moth: a member of species .
* 1944 , (Elizabeth Enright), Then There Were Five , Farrar & Rinehart, page 80:
* 1969 , (Sterling North), “An Introduction to Butterflies and Moths”, in , May 1969 issue, Boy Scouts of America,
* 2010 , Sally Roth (contributor), in Judy Pray (compiler), Garden Wisdom & Know-How: Everything You Need to Know to Plant, Grow, and Harvest , Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers, Inc., ISBN 978-1-57912-837-1,
(Christianity, chiefly, Catholicism, and, Anglicanism) A lunette : a crescent-shaped receptacle, often glass, for holding the (consecrated) host (the bread of communion) upright when exposed in the monstrance. “
* 1907 May, “Dominicanus”, “The Rosary and the Blessed Sacrament”, in the Dominican Friars, The Rosary Magazine , Volume 30, Number 5,
* 1917 , John F. Sullivan, The Externals of the Catholic Church , BiblioLife, LLC (2009), ISBN 9781113714084,
* 2007 , John Trigilio and Kenneth Brighenti, The Catholicism Answer Book: The 300 Most Frequently Asked Questions , Sourcebooks, Inc., ISBN 9781402208065,
(Hawaii) A foreman on a plantation.
* 1922 , U. G. Murphy, “The Japanese Problem in Hawaii: How the Task of Christianizing and Americanizing the Oriental is Progressing”, in The Friend , Volume 91, Number 6 (June 1922)
* 1959 , (novel), Fawcett Crest (1986), ISBN 9780449213353, page 737:
* 2000 , Wayne Patterson, The Ilse: First-Generation Korean Immigrants in Hawai?i, 1903–1973 , University of Hawai?i Press, ISBN 978-0-8248-2241-5,
* 2000 , Sally Engle Merry, Colonizing Hawai'i: the cultural power of law , page 321:
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Luna is a coordinate term of moon.
Luna is a synonym of moon.
As nouns the difference between moon and luna
is that moon is the largest satellite of Earth while luna is a luna moth: a member of species species: Actias luna.As proper nouns the difference between moon and luna
is that moon is the Earth's moon; the sole natural satellite of the Earth, represented in astronomy and astrology by ☾ while Luna is the name of Earth's moon.As a verb moon
is to display one's buttocks to, typically as a jest, insult, or protest.moon
English
Noun
(en noun)- (Shakespeare)
Synonyms
* (sense, Earth's largest natural satellite) Moon * (natural satellite of a planet) satellite, natural satellite * (month) calendar month, lunar month, month * See alsoDerived terms
* blood moon * blue moon * crescent moon * full moon * half-moon, half moon * harvest moon * howl at the moon * hung the moon * hunter's moon * man in the moon * moon bear * moon-blind * moon cake * mooncalf * moon-face * moonfish * moonflower * moon guitar * mooning * moonish * moonlight * moonlit * moonly * moon pool * moonraker * moonsail * moonwalk * moonwort * moon zither * new moon * old moon * once in a blue moon * over the moon * phase of the moon * smuggler's moon * thumbnail moon * waning moon * waxing moonVerb
(en verb)- Sarah mooned over Sam's photograph for months.
- You've been mooning after her forever, why not just ask her out?
- We were only three on board. The poor old skipper mooned in the cabin.
- If they have it to be exceeding white indeed, they seethe it yet once more, after it hath been thus sunned and mooned .
See also
* lunar * Moonie * SeleneExternal links
(disambig) * (projectlink) * (projectlink)Anagrams
* {l, en, mono}} 1000 English basic words ----luna
English
Etymology 1
Borrowed from (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- “Gee,” whispered Oliver. He sat there staring. “A luna'! I never thought I’d see a real ' luna !”
page 64:
- On the previous evening we had discovered with delight a luna with the fabulous moons, one on each pale green wing.
page 348:
- Spray BT on your young oak to protect against gypsy moths, and you wipe out future lunas , cecropias, and everything else on the leaves, along with the pests.
luna” in Don S. Armentrout and Robert Boak Slocum (editors), An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church: A User-Friendly Reference for Episcopalians , Church Publishing, Inc. (2000), ISBN 978-0-89869-211-2.
page 494:
- The Bread of Angels is first taken from the tabernacle, where it rests in the luna', and placed upon the altar, covered with a corporal. After genuflecting, the priest puts the ' luna containing the Blessed Sacrament on its throne—the monstrance—and elevates it
pages 115–116:
- This receptacle is called a “luna'” or “lunula” (a moon, or a little moon), and has glass on either side, so that the Host may be seen when enclosed therein.
page 156:
- The luna', which is a piece of glass in the shape of a moon, contains the Blessed Sacrament, previously consecrated. The ' luna is then placed in the middle of the sunburst of the monstrance.
Synonyms
* (glass holder) lunette, lunulaEtymology 2
From the (etyl) word .1986 , Mary Kawena Pukui, Samuel H. Elbert, Hawaiian dictionary: Hawaiian-English, English-Hawaiian, revised and enlarged edition (University of Hawaii Press)Noun
(en noun)page 130:
- There are several reasons why the Hawaiian-born Japanese boys and girls do not take kindly to plantation labor, but one of the chief reasons is the objection to the kind of lunas who oversee the work of the laborers.
page 17:
- While political problems between Japan and Korea would soon spill over into Hawai?i and sour relations between the two groups, the primary concern the Koreans had was with plantation work and the haoles (Caucasians) who acted in supervisory capacities as managers, doctors, and lunas .
- After the day was over I went to the luna to count my day but he would not. Then I went to him the second time and he said he would not put it down.
