Petrifier vs Petrifies - What's the difference?
petrifier | petrifies |
(very, rare) person or other object that petrifies, either literally or figuratively. (petrify)
To harden organic matter by permeating with water and depositing dissolved minerals.
* (and other bibliographic particulars) Kirwan
To produce rigidity akin to stone.
To immobilize with fright.
To become stone, or of a stony hardness, as organic matter by calcareous deposits.
(figurative) To become stony, callous, or obdurate.
* (and other bibliographic particulars) Dryden
(figurative) To make callous or obdurate; to stupefy; to paralyze; to transform; as by petrification.
* (and other bibliographic particulars) (Alexander Pope)
* (and other bibliographic particulars) (George Eliot)
As a noun petrifier
is (very|rare) person or other object that petrifies, either literally or figuratively.As a verb petrifies is
(petrify).petrifier
English
Noun
(en noun)petrifies
English
Verb
(head)petrify
English
Verb
- a river that petrifies any sort of wood or leaves
- Like Niobe we marble grow, / And petrify with grief.
- petrify a genius to a dunce
- A hideous fatalism, which ought, logically, to petrify your volition.