Obstruction vs Interlude - What's the difference?
obstruction | interlude | Related terms |
The act of obstructing, or state of being obstructed.
That which obstructs or impedes; an obstacle; an impediment; a hindrance.
The condition of having the natural powers obstructed in their usual course; the arrest of the vital functions; death.
An intervening episode, etc.
An entertainment between the acts of a play.
(music) A short piece put between the parts of a longer composition.
To provide with an interlude.
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=February 18, author=Tammy La Gorce, title=Between Songs, Interludes That Fall Upon Deaf Ears, work=New York Times
, passage=Jimmy Jam, co-producer of Ms. Jackson’s heavily interluded and influential 1989 album, “Rhythm Nation 1814” (and producer of a forthcoming album by Usher with interludes), also defended them. }}
Obstruction is a related term of interlude.
As nouns the difference between obstruction and interlude
is that obstruction is the act of obstructing, or state of being obstructed while interlude is an intervening episode, etc.As a verb interlude is
to provide with an interlude.obstruction
English
Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* * hindrance * impedance * roadblock * * See alsointerlude
English
(wikipedia interlude)Noun
(en noun)Verb
(interlud)citation