Mustang vs Stang - What's the difference?
mustang | stang |
A small, hardy, naturalized (feral) horse of the North American west.
* 1846 , , The Mysteries of the Backwoods , Carey and Hart, page
* 1851 , , The Scalp Hunters; Or, Romantic Adventures in Northern Mexico , vol. 3, Charles J. Skeet, page
A merchant marine who joined the U.S. Navy as a commissioned]] officer during the [[w:American Civil War, American Civil War.
* 1903 , James Hoyt (editor), Seen & Heard by Megargee , L.N. Megargee, page
* 1939 , Fred J. Buenzle, Bluejacket , W. W. Norton & Company, page
A commissioned officer who started military service as an enlisted person.
* 1918 , Alfred Emanuel Smith, New Outlook , volume 120 (September–December 1918), Outlook Publishing Company, page
* 1943 , Josef Israels, He's in the Marine Corps Now , R.M. McBride & Company, page
(archaic, or, obsolete) A long bar; a pole; a shaft; a stake.
* 1962 ,
(archaic, or, obsolete) In land measure, a pole, rod, or perch.
* 1880 ,
(dialect, rare) (sting)
As a noun mustang
is a small, hardy, naturalized (feral) horse of the north american west.As a verb stang is
.mustang
English
Noun
(en noun)12:
- The mustang pony, the invariable companion of the inhabitant of the prairie, whether he is rich or poor, is a little creature, apparently narrow-chested, and small across the loins.
145:
- Having ridden a distance of two or three miles, Garey slackened his pace, and put the mustang to a slow walk.
1754:
- He is a product of the merchant marine and is one of the officers called "Mustang s" who entered the navy during the Civil War.
179:
- He was the son of a famous artist, and was what we termed a "mustang " officer, who had come into the navy from the merchant service during the Civil War.
417:
- … and the chief engineer is a "mustang" — that is, an officer who has risen from the ranks of enlisted men.
170:
- Mustang — Officer who came up through the ranks. None better.
stang
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) (cognate with Old English steng).Noun
(en noun)- Gripping the stang , she peered / At ghostly trees. Bus stopped. Bus disappeared.
- These fields were intermingled with woods of half a stang ,*... (with the corresponding footnote: "An old word for a perch, sixteen feet and a half. These small woods were therefore eight feet and a quarter.")