Pedant vs Dane - What's the difference?
pedant | dane |
(archaic) A teacher or schoolmaster.
* , vol. 1 ch. 24:
A person who emphasizes his/her knowledge through the use of vocabulary.
(label) A person who is overly concerned with formal rules and trivial points of learning.
for someone who came from Denmark, also a variant of Dean.
* 1913 Harry Leon Wilson, Bunker Bean , BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2008, ISBN 0554347148, page 13
transferred from the surname, or from the ethnic term Dane (like Scott or Norman).
* 1977 , The Thorn Birds , Gramercy Books 1998, ISBN 0517201658, pages 432-433
As a noun pedant
is schoolmaster.As an adjective pedant
is pedantic.As a verb dane is
faint, swoon.pedant
English
Noun
(en noun)- I have in my youth oftentimes beene vexed to see a Pedant [tr. pedante''] brought in, in most of Italian comedies, for a vice or sport-maker, and the nicke-name of ''Magister to be of no better signification amongst us.
Derived terms
* pedantic * pedantryUsage notes
* Do not confuse pedant' with '''pendant''' or ' pennant .See also
* (wikipedia "pedant") *External links
* * *Anagrams
* English refractory feminine rhymes ----dane
English
Synonyms
* (person from Denmark) DanishDerived terms
* Great DaneProper noun
(en proper noun)- Often he wrote good ones on casual slips and fancied them his; names like Trevellyan or Montressor or Delancey, with musical prefixes; or a good, short, beautiful, but dignified name like "Gordon Dane ". He liked that one. It suggested something.
- "I'm going to call him Dane ."
- "What a queer name! Why? Is it an O'Neill family name? I thought you were finished with the O'Neills."
- "It's got nothing to do with Luke. This is his name, no one else's. - - - I called Justine Justine simply because I liked the name, and I'm calling Dane Dane for the same reason."
- "Well, it does have a nice ring to it," Fee admitted.