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Pearl vs Peart - What's the difference?

pearl | peart |

As a noun pearl

is a shelly concretion, usually rounded, and having a brilliant luster, with varying tints, found in the mantle, or between the mantle and shell, of certain bivalve mollusks, especially in the pearl oysters and river mussels, and sometimes in certain univalves. It is usually due to a secretion of shelly substance around some irritating foreign particle. Its substance is the same as nacre, or mother-of-pearl. Round lustrous pearls are used in jewellery.

As a verb pearl

is to set or adorn with pearls, or with mother-of-pearl. Used also figuratively.

As a proper noun Pearl

is {{given name|female|from=English}} from the English noun pearl.

As an adjective peart is

lively; active.

pearl

English

(wikipedia pearl)

Noun

(en noun)
  • A shelly concretion, usually rounded, and having a brilliant luster, with varying tints, found in the mantle, or between the mantle and shell, of certain bivalve mollusks, especially in the pearl oysters and river mussels, and sometimes in certain univalves. It is usually due to a secretion of shelly substance around some irritating foreign particle. Its substance is the same as nacre, or mother-of-pearl. Round lustrous pearls are used in jewellery.
  • (figuratively) Something precious.
  • * Shakespeare
  • I see thee compassed with thy kingdom's pearl .
  • * 1920 , (Herman Cyril McNeile), Bulldog Drummond Chapter 1
  • Hugh helped himself to bacon. "My dear fellow, she can think what she likes so long as she continues to grill bacon like this. Your wife is a treasure, James—a pearl amongst women; and you can tell her so with my love."
  • A capsule of gelatin or similar substance containing liquid for e.g. medicinal application.
  • Nacre, or mother-of-pearl.
  • A whitish speck or film on the eye.
  • (Milton)
  • A fish allied to the turbot; the brill.
  • A light-colored tern.
  • One of the circle of tubercles which form the bur on a deer's antler.
  • (typography) Five-point size of type, between agate and diamond.
  • A fringe or border.
  • Verb

    (en verb)
  • To set or adorn with pearls, or with mother-of-pearl. Used also figuratively.
  • To cause to resemble pearls; to make into small round grains; as, to pearl barley.
  • To resemble pearl or pearls.
  • To give or hunt for pearls; as, to go pearling.
  • (surfing) to dig the nose of one's surfboard into the water, often on takeoff.
  • * 1999, Joanne VanMeter [http://www.letsplay.net/archive99/020399.shtml]:
  • Used a pointed tip today and learned why I kept pearling with my round tipped board. Round noses like to dig into the water, causing frustrating wipeouts.

    Derived terms

    (Terms derived from the noun "pearl") * cultured pearl * mabe pearl * mother-of-pearl * pearl ash * pearl diver * pearl barley * pearl cotton * pearl essence * pearl gray * pearl millet * pearl necklace * pearl of wisdom * pearl onion * pearl oyster * perlemoen * pearler * pearlescent * pearling * pearly * pearly king * pearly nautilus * pearly queen * pearly whites * seed pearl * sulfur pearl

    Anagrams

    *

    peart

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • Lively; active.
  • * 1586', , ''Albion's England'', Booke VI, Chapter XXXI, '''1810 , ''The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper , Volume IV, page 579,
  • There was a tricksie girle, I wot, // Albeit clad in gray, / As peart as bird, as straite as boult, // As fresh as flower in May.
  • * 1856 , Alice Carey, Married, not Mated; Or, How they lived at Woodside and Throckmorton Hall , page 109,
  • I smiled; and she went on to say I looked a little more peart ; maybe I would not be such a slow coach after all.
  • * 1893 , Lynde Palmer, A Question of Honour , page 88,
  • "No young man could 'a' ben more peart and alive than that, Dotty."
  • * 1979 , Marguerite Noble, Filaree: A Novel of an American Life , 1985, page 109,
  • "Yore pa don't hold to card playin' but you needs to have quiet and rest. I'm pleased to see Annie's up to playin'. Baby looks a little more peart this mornin' too."