Orgue vs Morgue - What's the difference?
orgue | morgue |
(military) Any of a number of long, thick pieces of timber, pointed and shod with iron, and suspended, each by a separate rope, over a gateway, to be let down in case of attack.
(military) A piece of ordnance, consisting of a number of musket barrels arranged so that a match or train may connect with all their touchholes, and a discharge be secured almost or quite simultaneously.
(Webster 1913)
----
A supercilious or haughty attitude; arrogance.
* 1855 , Sir Richard Burton, Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah , Dover 1964, p. 34:
A building or room where dead bodies are kept before their proper burial or cremation.
The archive and background information division of a newspaper.
:: Kwapil, Joseph F. (2 July 1921) "Librarian Talks of Newspaper Morgue", Fourth Estate
As nouns the difference between orgue and morgue
is that orgue is (military) any of a number of long, thick pieces of timber, pointed and shod with iron, and suspended, each by a separate rope, over a gateway, to be let down in case of attack while morgue is a supercilious or haughty attitude; arrogance.orgue
English
Noun
(en noun)morgue
English
Noun
(en noun)- They being newcomers, free from the western morgue so soon caught by Oriental Europeans, were particularly civil to me, even wishing to mix me a strong draught; but I was not so fortunate with all on board.
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